The Asian Age

Patti Smith had a bad year

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In the Chinese zodiac, 2016 was the year of the monkey, a trickster year full of the unhappy and the unexpected for Patti Smith. It starts badly at New Year: ‘Some guy with a greasy ponytail leaned over and puked on my boots.’ Then it gets worse, private tragedies and political shocks drawing Smith into a restive, twilight state: ‘The mischievou­s monkey, toying with the climate, toying with the coming election, toying with the mind.’ She tells us how she ‘skated along the fringe of a dream’ in this — well what exactly is it?

Not fiction, because Smith is telling stories from her life; but hardly non-fiction, because those stories are drawn as often from her unconsciou­s as her waking life, the two bleeding into each other over an unmappable border. It’s clear that we’re in strange territory from the outset, when the author finds herself engaged in a dialogue with the sign of the Dream Motel, where she stays in Santa Cruz. The narrating voice is the voice of Smith’s music, twisting between the incantatio­ns of a priestess and laconic poetry.

She walks between two worlds. In 2016, she’s nearly 70 and her friends and peers are dying: she loses the legendary rock producer Sandy Pearlman and the playwright and actor Sam Shepard. Either that, or they’re already dead. Countercul­ture heroes such as Arthur Lee of the band Love, Jimi Hendrix and Allen Ginsberg haunt the narrative. If you were to categorise this trickster book you could call it a travelogue of the imaginatio­n, with the Dream Motel (‘Inn!’) sign as Smith’s spirit guide in her encounters with the lost and the leaving. At the end, she enumerates her griefs, but concludes: “Yet I keep thinking that something wonderful is about to happen.” There is plenty of wonderful in this small, sly, mystic book, Year of the Monkey.

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