Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Punk Rock Is Cool for the End of the World
Punk Rock Is Cool for the End of the World: Poems and Notebooks of Ed Smith | Ed Smith
1 post | 1 reading
The irreverent, tweetable, ludicrous, painful, wondrous work of the L.A. punk poet--widely available for the first time. In Punk Rock Is Cool for the End of the World, David Trinidad brings together a comprehensive selection of Ed Smith's work: his published books; unpublished poems; excerpts from his extensive notebooks; photos and ephemera; and his timely "cry for civilization," "Return to Lesbos" put down that gun / stop electing Presidents. Ed Smith blazed onto the Los Angeles poetry scene in the early 1980s from out of the hardcore punk scene. The charismatic, nerdy young man hit home with his funny/scary off-the-cuff-sounding poems, like "Fishing" This is a good line. / This is a bad line. This is a fishing line. Ed's vibrant "gang" of writer and artist friends--among them Amy Gerstler, Dennis Cooper, Bob Flanagan, Mike Kelley, and David Trinidad--congregated at Beyond Baroque in Venice, on LA's west side. They read and partied and performed together, and shared and published each others' work. Ed was more than bright and versatile: he worked as a math tutor, an animator, and a typesetter. In the mid-1990s, he fell in love with Japanese artist Mio Shirai; they married and moved to New York City. Despite productive years and joyful times, Ed was plagued by mood disorders and drug problems, and at the age of forty-eight, he took his own life. Ed Smith's poems speak to living in an increasingly dehumanizing consumer society and corrupt political system. This "punk Dorothy Parker" is more relevant than ever for our ADD, technology-distracted times.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
blurb
Bibliobear
post image

Current readerly pleasures: an ubiquity of Californian poets.

I'm particularly excited to read David Lerner's A Bouquet of Nails, a book of heretofore uncollected poems. His provocative and penetrating poems bristle with razor sharp insights and metaphors. They should be more widely known.

Ed Smith is entirely new to me. He combines influences from punk rock and Sappho.

And Wanda Coleman's work has a rivetingly defiant energy.

Check them out!