A young rock and roll fan, who went from being a wanna-be poet, Bennington College student, unpublished novelist, unsold screenwriter, to playwright, rock critic, DJ, heavy drug user, and finally a real writer, Marc Spitz's memoir runs the gamut. Ostensibly a memoir of downtown New York in the 90's, it's also a memoir of Los Angeles, drug culture, popular music, and a strange coming-of-age story about the difference between rock and roll and a "rock and roll lifestyle."
The story is also about the pursuit of fame and what it's like to be in that coveted but illusory spotlight. Littered with encounters both brief and prolonged of the author's heroes it reads like a counter-culture shopping list. Allen Ginsberg, Ryan Adams, Trent Reznor, Courtney Love, Jeff Buckley, Rivers Cuomo of Weezer, Chloe Sevigny, Kim Deal, Guns N' Roses, Interpol, The Killers, Paul Rudd, Coldplay, Pavement, Peter Dinklage, Julie Bowen, murdered actress/writer/director Adrienne Shelley, Morrissey, Joe Strummer, L.A. punk Guru Brenden Mullen, Shirley Clarke,The Strokes, The Dandy Warhols and Chuck Klosterman all make appearances.
It's by turns informative, harrowing, sad, extremely funny, moving and all-round interesting. Spitz has an eye and ear for the telling detail and a nose for the truth that brings these pages to vivid life. - BH.