Like any good biography, this was the story of a number of people, and of a generation too. The book starts off with a description of the well-heeled Sedgwick clan. There are stories of their roots in Stockbridge, Mass., summers in Murray Bay, Canada, drinking syllabub, and getting educated at Groton and Harvard. The narrative settles on one Francis Sedgwick, a brash, macho character who marries well and settles in a beautiful ranch in Santa Barbara to raise a large brood. This is classic, and very enjoyable, wealthy family reading - the batty relatives, the fooling around, the drinking, the sojourns to posh mental institutions, the suicides. Everyone loves this kind of story - is it a kind of vengeful streak in people? Or is it the sense of relief one gets upon discovering that the high and mighty must struggle with emotional pain like the rest of us? Or is it the fascination with bizarre behavior which most of us would not even think of doing ourselves? Probably some combination of the above.
The true focus of the story is of course Edie Sedgwick, Warhol "superstar", party girl extraordinaire, and sixties icon, the seventh child of Francis Sedgwick and the fabulousy wealthy Alice de Forest. She was not the first of her clan to get into trouble, although her troubles became the most notorious. The premature deaths of a couple of siblings had a big impact on her, as did her parents' hospitalizing her for a year or two following an eating disorder. She eventually made her way to New York, where she became a well-known girl about town, hanging out with Warhol's factory set, appearing in his movies, and developing a full-fledged drug habit - speed and downers and just about anything else she could get her hands on. This crowd makes for an intriguing tableau: a far out (far gone?) group, on the cutting edge of art and drugs and sex and society and self-destruction. But Edie was too spoiled and impulsive to make the transition from Warhol's happenings to a real acting career. Things began to spin out of control - a trip to Dr. Charles Roberts's methedrine and vitamin clinic could easily to turn into a spontaneous orgy, she fought with lovers and family, and ended up in psychiatric care. Later, she married a penniless hippie, and they had an apparently pleasant existence up until the accidental overdose that did her in.
I did not find Edie to be the most fascinating figure I have ever read about. However, the book is in an oral history format, and a number of the contributors were very interesting, as was the milieux described.