"Poignant, gorgeous--a picaresque voyage through Patti Smith''s dreams and life, blending fiction and reality, conjured characters and actual ones. She writes of seeing her image reflected on the surface of the toaster: ''I noticed I looked young and old simultaneously.'' That describes her spirit perfectly." --Maureen Dowd, The New York Times "Elegant, poetic, wildly entertaining, touching--a beautifully realized and unique memoir that chronicles a transformative year in the life of one of our most multi-talented creative voices. Part travel journal, part reflexive essay on our times, and part meditation on existence at the edge of a new decade of life . Effortlessly weaving together fiction and nonfiction, Smith takes readers on two unique journeys: one that can be traced on a map and one, infinitely richer and more complex, that takes place inside her head and heart. Smith''s musical career sometimes threatens to overshadow her accomplishments in other creative fields--but every page in this book is packed with enough outstanding prose to constantly remind readers that Smith is an accomplished novelist, essayist, and poet who won the National Book Award in 2010. In her capable hands, a simple look at New York City in winter becomes a flash of beautiful poetry.
Smith''s approach to nonfiction is unique and brave: It counts as true if it happened, if she imagined it, and if she felt it. This is a book about Smith and the world all around. And that is just one more reason why everyone should read it." --Gabino Iglesias, NPR "Moving--an account of physical and intellectual wanderings . Smith does not rage against her approaching 70th birthday, nor does she turn away from it. She finds art everywhere, and remains a pioneer, the same rules-shattering poet and National Book Award-winning writer . She is, as she writes in Year of the Monkey , ''still going about my business, that of being alive, the best I can.''" --Jack Cline, The Washington Post "Miraculous .
A dream-driven, reality-reclaiming masterpiece laced with poetry and philosophy and surrealism and the hardest realism there is: that of hope . Smith is aglow; she moves through this world as a time-traveler, an eavesdropper, a vagrant, a vagabond in the land of literature and life; she is a human mirror. She. invites us to relinquish the different names we give to the living of life and just live it , with all its disorienting uncertainty. Reflecting on clarifying dreams, worrying for our shared future, Smith reminds us that the only remedy for a broken reality is more truth. She reaches, with a lucid and luminous hand, for the buoyancy that is our lifeline." --Maria Popova, Brain Pickings "A lucid dream of a memoir .Smith sees mystical connections everywhere--and, floating along on the drifts of her words, the reader does, too.
" -- The New Yorker "Deft and enigmatic. Life can''t help but confound us; love is enough to sustain us, and loss, if not revocable, can, for the moment, be redeemed. [But] Smith is too smart for easy consolations; she has been through too much . She summons this scene, this moment, giving it the weight of a reckoning. Year of the Monkey reminds us that despair and possibility often spring from the same source." --David L. Ulin, Los Angeles Times "Smith began writing Year of the Monkey on New Year''s Day 2016, a transformative year for the artist that brought aging, the loss of friends, and overall disillusionment. Juxtaposed with this personal narrative are Smith''s descriptions of western landscapes she visited .
Fact and fiction increasingly blur, a combination made surreal by Smith''s obsession with details that keep popping up in various locations . A gripping tale of the search for meaning in times of turbulence--expressed with Smith''s signature poetic flair." --Christian Allaire, Vogue "Since 1975, Patti Smith has been blurring the lines between music, poetry, and prose, howling with grief and roaring with delight, whether onstage or via the written word. Year of the Monkey [is] her preternatural latest memoir . In this slim, hallucinatory volume, Smith roves the country in real time, visiting favorite haunts, hitching rides with strangers, contemplating the fuzzy border between waking and dreaming, and mourning the results of the 2016 presidential election. But just as a sense of gloom begins to settle, the sun peeks through the clouds. For while ''there is nothing in heaven like the suffering of real life.,'' she writes, ''I still keep thinking something wonderful is about to happen.
''" --Leigh Haber, O, The Oprah Magazine "Lyrical, poignant . [the book] chronicles Smith''s travels and beautifully veers between dreamlike solitary reveries. Smith gives voice in the book to a national feeling of grief framed by her own personal losses; she sums up the nexus of aging, steeped in reflection and loss. She notices every detail like a photographer, with her words exquisitely framed by nuance." --Solvej Schou, Associated Press "Reading about [Smith''s life] makes the world shimmer with possibility. We follow her as she hitchhikes through the desert and gets left for dead, meets weirdos and mystics in diners up and down the coast, then takes off for Kentucky to help the playwright Sam Shepard finish his final project. A book full of riddles and fantasies [and] about one woman''s 2016. Grief on a colossal, national scale has a way of making the most personal, quotidian sufferings feel small and unimportant.
At the same time, it makes those typical human tragedies appear suddenly of a piece with the world around them. Patti Smith writes beautifully." --Kaitlyn Tiffany, Vox "A fascinating journey . powerful stuff. Smith [has a] peculiar brand of wandering--dead phone, no car, scant provisions, vague itinerary . The book has little about music, [but] what''s there is priceless. Year of the Monkey [also] includes charming, quirky photos by the author, and achingly sweet recollections." --Claude Peck, Minneapolis Star Tribune "In her third memoir, Smith is both haunted and joyed by the passage of time.
Losses surround her [in] the year she turns 70--a year of devastation, with catastrophes both unique to her life and ones shared across America. As she crosses the country in a series of solitary adventures infused with the memories of her life on the road, she meets the world with curiosity and openness. The many [who] revere Smith will take a thrill in her vivid recollections of long ago days on the stage and the streets of Greenwich Village, while anyone consumed by the fears of today will find them expressed vividly by a beautiful voice." --Adrienne Gaffney, San Francisco Chronicle "Smith''s grace and erudite philosophy is a welcome balm in these times . Her latest memoir is an introspective look at her year of solo wandering--she documents that year''s massive political and social change her own lyrical way. The American canon is littered with ''road trip memoirs,'' but if there''s a voice we''d want to add to that genre, it would be Smith." -- Town & Country "Lovely, dreamlike . a slim volume [with a] minor-key melancholy.
The punk poet''s latest memoir unfold like the stack of old Polaroids in her New York apartment: ''One after another, each a talisman on a necklace of continuous travels.''" -- Entertainment Weekly "Compelling--ruminations, adventures, unexpected connections: [this] personal, cross-country odyssey captured by her prose and Polaroid portraits finds Smith mining magical moments within even the most seemingly mundane of circumstances. She weaves threads of everyday experiences and warm recollections together in the manner of a waking dream. Funny moments make Smith relatable. The narrative thread is transformation. She is equally a participant and observer of life; as much as art provides sustenance and solace for her in troubled times, by the end she is invoking a greater call to action. If there is anyone capable of living in the past, present and future simultaneously, and occupying space between reality and dreams, it is Smith. It may not be easy to conveniently explain Smith''s style or approach, but that is not the point.
You simply need to surrender to it to be inspired." --Bryan Reesman, Newsday "One of America''s finest memoirists. Funny and weird, sober and sad, Year of the Monkey is simultaneously a travelogue of Smith''s journeys through California, Arizona, Portugal and Kentucky; a fantastical dream-journal full of imagined conversations; and a clear-eyed meditation on Smith''s relationships with two of her oldest, dearest friends--playwright Sam Shepard and music producer Sandy Pearlman--who passed away as she was writing it. It''s perhaps the closest she''s come to synthesizing the penetrating maturity of her latter-day writings with the improvisational wildness of her early free-form poems and songs." --Andrew Barker, Variety "In her poetic prose and [with] snaps of her trusty Polaroid camera, Smith captures truth and beauty, challenges and victories. Year of the Monkey traces her year of wandering across California''s Santa Cruz coast and the West, searching for.