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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > Patti Smith tapped into her ‘youngster self’ to write down new memoir: ‘She’s nonetheless right here’
Patti Smith tapped into her ‘youngster self’ to write down new memoir: ‘She’s nonetheless right here’
Entertainment

Patti Smith tapped into her ‘youngster self’ to write down new memoir: ‘She’s nonetheless right here’

Last updated: November 19, 2025 11:35 pm
Editorial Board Published November 19, 2025
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On the Shelf

Bread of Angels

By Patti SmithRandom Home: 288 pages, $30

Should you purchase books linked on our web site, The Occasions might earn a fee from Bookshop.org, whose charges assist impartial bookstores.

It’s a uncommon grey Saturday in Los Angeles; raindrops gather alongside a window overlooking a row of bushes at Le Parc at Melrose.

Mild trickles its method into the lodge room, illuminating a brown espresso desk. An unreleased novel from Swiss creator Nelio Biedermann sits subsequent to a cup of tea, and a wooden cross string necklace lies on the ground.

“The weather is challenging for singing because it’s so humid, but it’ll be fine,” Patti Smith says, earlier than reaching for the mug.

Her grey hair, with strands of white, hides underneath a grey beanie. She braved the rain throughout a stroll along with her son about an hour earlier, and nonetheless sports activities a mildly damp blazer atop her black T-shirt. In signature Smith fashion, her light-wash denims scrunch simply above a pair of tan, heeled boots.

She’s 78 now — 79 in December: “Next year I’ll be 80, I guess I’m getting older,” she says with a smile.

In seven hours, she’ll step out on stage at Walt Disney Live performance Corridor to carry out “Horses” in full, 50 years after it was launched. Therefore, the humidity debacle.

“The rain is good … but fills your lungs with humidity,” she continues. “Makes it harder to push your notes.”

The anniversary tour coincides with one other launch, however a e-book reasonably than an album. “Bread of Angels” marks Smith’s newest literary endeavor, chronicling her life in full. Naturally, the memoir is a companion to the 2010 Nationwide Ebook Award-winning “Just Kids.”

That e-book has developed into a contemporary basic of kinds for its intimate portrayal of Smith’s adolescence as an artist. Significantly, her days spent on the Resort Chelsea alongside photographer and lifelong buddy Robert Mapplethorpe, whom she notes was her “most important early relationship.”

“I will admit that I’m hoping people will look at these books in tandem,” she says. “‘Just Kids’ is like the brother and this is the sister.”

In “Bread of Angels,” she briefly mentions Mapplethorpe, however nonetheless etches out a heartfelt, poignant picture of the person when referencing “Just Kids”: “I continued my journeys with the manuscript in my small metal suitcase. Robert and I never traveled in life, but now we went everywhere together.”

After “Horses,” Patti Smith rapidly turned some of the distinguished artists in New York Metropolis’s proto-punk scene, however obtained little business success.

(Steven Sebring)

This e-book focuses way more on Smith’s struggles whereas rising up, in addition to her relationship with late husband Fred Smith and their eventual departure from the general public eye.

“There’s only maybe three lines about Fred in ‘Just Kids,’” she says.

The lens on Patti and Fred is widened, at the same time as she writes, “his decline was the tragedy of my life, and it profits no one to outline the private battles of a very private man.”

“That was the most difficult part to write, because Fred was a private man and I feel like he is a private man,” she says. “There’s a million other things that I have for myself, but I wanted to share certain aspects of Fred — I wanted people to know him a little.”

As for the way the memoir took place in a broader sense, Smith refers again to a “fully formed dream” she had a decade in the past, during which a messenger got here to her door bearing a e-book.

“It was my book,” she remembers. “It was white with a white ribbon, and it had four Irving Penn photographs of all my dresses — my child dress, the dress Robert gave me, the dress my brother bought me and my wedding dress — an old Victorian dress.”

“The book was an autobiography and each section was centered around a dress. And when I woke up, I was still holding the book.”

She put it to the again of her thoughts for some time, regardless of pondering it was an indication, nevertheless it crept again up: “It kept haunting me that this was something I should do.”

Over time, she started to consider these whom she had misplaced in her life. Fred, Mapplethorpe, her buddy Sam Shepard — the actor and playwright — and her brother, Todd Smith, have been all gone.

“All stripped of the possibilities of forging work, adventure and life on Earth,” she writes.

She additionally felt compelled to honor these she had misplaced, particularly at their younger age.

“I thought it would be a good thing to write about the people in my life who didn’t live long enough to really tell their story or fully live their story,” she says.

A part of the e-book’s function was additionally to “set the record straight,” having needed to navigate so many “made-up stories” about her personal life, particularly when she and Fred withdrew from the general public eye.

"Bread of Angels" by Patti Smith

“I don’t like using a book to refute things or to say anything disparaging about another person,” she clarifies. “A lot of cruel things were written about me and my husband … people had their own speculation, none of which were true.”

“After a while, one decides, are you going to let what others write become the told and retold story of your life or write it as it is? There’s nothing in my book that’s not true, or exaggerated or colored to make me look better.”

That is maybe most evident when she speaks about her childhood. Smith grew up poor, moved 12 occasions earlier than fourth grade and witnessed the deaths and abrupt disappearances of many mates.

She reminiscences about her buddy Klara, whom she’d grown near and says “propelled me as a writer.” Klara vanished in the future, solely forsaking a botanical e-book with pages torn out. Simply earlier than Smith met Klara, her buddy Stephanie had died of uremia at 12.

On the identical time, she was preventing illnesses of her personal.

Smith had “successfully vanquished” tuberculosis, scarlet fever, mumps and rooster pox by the point she had reached fourth grade, when she was struck with a virus throughout the Asian flu pandemic that almost took her life.

“When we are really young, we’re a bit self-centered,” she says. “The idea of really expressing gratitude — I mean, pure gratitude — sometimes we don’t do it. It’s not because we’re bad, we’re just caught in the moment.”

“It’s an opportunity, even with a sentence, to thank certain people, because I’m not going to write another book like this.”

The dialogue of her childhood shouldn’t be all grim, nevertheless. Smith shares tales of receiving a replica of “Silver Pennies” by Blanche Jennings Thompson; a “sole family visit” to the Philadelphia Museum of Artwork, the place she was moved by the work of Pablo Picasso; and stumbling upon “The Selfish Giant” by Oscar Wilde, listed in Kids’s Digest as a fairy story.

Her skill to recall such reminiscences with precision and focus on the best way she felt on the time is mesmerizing. She writes that, as people, we should typically return to “our child self, weathering out obstacles in good faith.”

It’s a relationship she maintains: “She’s still here,” she says of her youthful self.

“I think that’s been a saving grace for me. That 10-year-old child had a fully-formed imagination and a fully-formed conscience,” she continues. “We grow up in that I’ve accepted responsibility in my life … but that doesn’t mean that I’ve lost touch with some of our magical elements, the most prized being our imagination.”

The clock ticks on; six hours till Smith performs “Horses,” maybe hand in hand with the younger artist who first penned the lyrics to “Gloria” and “Redondo Beach.”

The album is now acknowledged as some of the influential proto-punk data of all time — merging the road poetry of Sixties songwriters with New York Metropolis’s then-contemporary sound. Nonetheless, upon its launch, it did not carry out effectively commercially.

“It still never went gold,” Smith says after amusing. “I’ve never had a gold record, which is fine with me. I was working in a bookstore when we recorded ‘Horses,’ and after we finished touring, I thought I would be back in the bookstore.”

Patti and Fred Smith, both wearing all-black, pose for a photo.

Patti Smith says her late husband Fred Smith’s appearances within the e-book have been the “most difficult part to write.”

(Seiji Matsumoto)

Smith stood on the precipice of stardom 4 years later, when she launched “Wave” in 1979. It was round this time that she and the Patti Smith Group determined to disband, which resulted within the aforementioned rumors surrounding her motives.

“It was all the demands, and that everything one did was to perpetuate the album, the tour, maybe the next record,” she recollects. “All of my energy was put into traveling, going to radio stations, doing interviews. … None of this was terrible, except as an artist, I wasn’t doing anything.”

“I didn’t keep a journal anymore; I wasn’t writing. … I was on this sort of rock ’n’ roll treadmill, which can be exciting, but is also exhausting. In terms of my personal work or my own personal evolution, I wasn’t doing much.”

Beforehand, Smith had additionally made numerous sacrifices to be uncompromising in her work and to take care of the integrity of her artistry, writing, “I had been somewhat naive in believing one got successful solely by their own merit.” This particularly referenced incidents resembling refusing to lip-sync reside or alter tune lyrics.

For at present’s artists, she says it comes right down to a “personal choice.”

“I didn’t pursue being a pop star. I don’t think badly of them — I love our pop stars. I don’t have that ability, I’m not talented in that way,” she says. “In the sphere I was working in, it didn’t feel right. I couldn’t bring myself to do that. And I’ve turned down lucrative contracts or different things because they weren’t right for me, but they were also quite generous, you know? They were just somebody else’s vision.”

“I think no matter what anyone chooses, they should make the decisions that are right for them. So if somebody else needs to lip-sync to something, it’s not a crime.”

She focuses, furrowing her forehead to ship yet one more batch of priceless recommendation.

“Be willing to work hard no matter what you want to do. [If] you want to be a baker, you want to be a gardener, you want to be a plumber, you want to be a poet — no matter what you choose, it is attached to work ethic. In our present culture, sometimes people are looking for ways to package things really quickly, or they’re more into the marketing of something than the thing itself,” she provides.

“All of the marketing and all of the social media and all of the accolades, they’ll all fall away. The thing that will endure is the work itself.”

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