Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 25 de jun. de 1997 · On the road with the Blank Generation, Go Now takes readers on a wild trip across the country and into the head of a down-on-his-luck punk musician.Billy, a burnt-out, drug- and sex-addicted punk musician, sets out with his erstwhile French girlfriend, Chrissa, on a...

  2. 4 de jun. de 2023 · Naomi Fry interviews the punk-rock legend Richard Hell about his new poetry book, nineteen-seventies New York, drugs, ... Hell has written two novels (1996’s “Go Now” and 2005’s ...

  3. Richard Hell homepage and CUZ Editions information. O f f i c i a l S i t e ... each illustrating a passage in Hell's 1996 novel Go Now... A spectacular exhibit, curated by Richard's wife Sheelagh Bevan, ... Now up online: Richard reviews, in current Bookforum, Dear Sandy, ...

  4. On the road with the Blank Generation, "Go Now" takes readers on a wild trip across the country and into the head of a down-on-his-luck punk musician. ""Go Now" is a vile, scabrous, unforgivable, ... Richard Hell. Fourth Estate, 1996 - Automobile travel - 176 pages. 0 Reviews.

  5. About Richard Hell: Born in 1949, Richard Meyers was shipped off to a private school for troublesome kids in Delaware, which is where he met Tom ... ― Richard Hell, Go Now. tags: beauty, lion, rain. 8 likes. Like “It's great to be anywhere as a writer. It saves ...

  6. Excerpts from and reviews of Richard Hell's 1996 novel Go Now; linking to Hell bio with samples of his music, writing, song lyrics, art, and photos from over the years. ABOUT RICHARD HELL'S ... "Richard Hell's raw, witty and entertaining first novel, a road novel that owes as much to Huck Finn and Jim as it does to Hunter S. Thompson or Jim ...

  7. www.kirkusreviews.com › book-reviews › richard-hellGO NOW | Kirkus Reviews

    1 de jun. de 1996 · GO NOW. by Richard Hell ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 1, 1996. A punk-rocker of modest renown and a self-styled poet, Hell debuts with a pointless and plotless fiction that lacks either the drug authenticity of a Burroughs or the transgressive aesthetic of an Acker. A junkie's journal, this clumsily written narrative relies on the thinnest of premises ...