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For 6,557 miles, Chuck Klosterman thought about dying. He drove a rental car from New York to Rhode Island to Georgia to Mississippi to Iowa to Minneapolis to Fargo to Seattle, and he chased death and rock 'n' roll all the way. Within the span of twenty-one days, Chuck had three relationships end--one by choice, one by chance, and one by exhaustion. Chuck explored every brand of rock star demise. He wanted to know why the greatest career move any musician can make is to stop breathing. . . and what that means for the rest of us.
Klosterman follows up on 2003's Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs by expanding on an article he wrote for Spin about driving cross-country to visit several of America's most famous rock and roll death sites, from the Rhode Island club where more than 90 Great White fans died in a fire, to the Iowa field where Buddy Holly's plane crashed. Along the way, Klosterman opines on rock music, never afraid to offend-as when he interprets a Radiohead album as a 9/11 prophecy or reminds readers that before Kurt Cobain's suicide, many preferred Pearl Jam to Nirvana. The quest to uncover these deaths' social significance is quickly overwhelmed by Klosterman's personal obsessions, especially his agonizing over sexual relationships. He applies semifictional techniques to these concerns, inventing an imaginary conversation in the car with three girlfriends that becomes the book's centerpiece. This literary cleverness recalls classic gonzo journalism, but also contains a self-conscious edge, inviting comparison to Dave Eggers. Klosterman also worries his neuroses will brand him as "the male Elizabeth Wurtzel," but he needn't fret. Despite their shared subject matter of drug use and cultural musing, Klosterman has clearly established that he has a potent voice all his own. Agent, Daniel Greenburg. (July 19) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsA popular Esquire columnist and all-around pop culture fanatic, Chuck Klosterman overanalyzes everything -- from the cultural significance of The Sims to Billy Joel's greatness level -- in essay collections like Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs and Chuck Klosterman IV.
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October 31, 2008: This is one of my favorite books. I enjoy Klosterman's writing style although I have yet to read any of his other books. I found myself laughing out loud to myself. The way he explains his thoughts around different aspects of our culture today, is humorous and enlightening. I recommend this book to anyone who has an interest in music and today's culture.
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February 28, 2008: I read the reviews before I did this and I noticed that someone said that they hated this book. I needed to point out that if you knew anything about Chuck Klosterman you would understand that his books are more deeper than talking about just girls and rock and roll. It's about life and figuring out where you fit in it. In this book you hear about different places where rockers and superstars passed away and how Chuck feels when he is there. This book is powerful and one that I will read over and over again.
Name:
Chuck Klosterman
Current Home:
New York, New York
Date of Birth:
June 05, 1972
Place of Birth:
Wyndmere, North Dakota
Education:
Degree in Journalism, University of North Dakota, 1994
In our interview, Klosterman shared some fun and fascinating facts about himself:
"I think I love onion rings, but I actually don't. Very often, I will purchase onion rings and throw them in the oven, and I'll be very excited about the premise of consuming them. However, when I finally start to eat supper, I realize they're only okay. Somehow, this situation has happened to me at least five times in my lifetime: For some reason, I keep unconsciously convincing myself that onion rings are delicious."
"The original title for Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs was American Minotaur, but everybody turned against me."
What was the book that most influenced your life or your career as a writer -- and why?
This is an almost impossible question to answer; I don't think my influences are that clear (even to me). When I was in eighth grade, I was mostly influenced intellectually by television, primarily Monty Python's Flying Circus and Late Night with David Letterman. I was also deeply engaged with heavy metal, so I was playing Mötley Crüe records constantly. However, I was also inexplicably obsessed with black literature for about six months of that same school year, so I was reading Black Boy and Native Son and Black like Me and Invisible Man and all that stuff. I suppose it was the combination of all those things that influenced how I started to think about writing. I write like an absurd British talk show host who identifies with Richard Wright and Nikki Sixx.
What are your ten favorite books, and what makes them special to you?
Where I'm Calling From by Raymond Carver -- This is where I learned how to begin and end stories.
What are some of your favorite films, and what makes them unforgettable to you?
The film that changed my life (more than any other) was Slacker, because that was the first time it ever dawned on me that someone could tell stories without a chronology or a narrative. I realize that concept seems totally obvious now, but it really blew my f**king mind in 1992.
I could probably list 1,000 other movies in this space and feel comfortable with my selections, although I'm not sure what quality makes any given film "unforgettable." I suppose it mainly has to do with the way its characters talk. As such, I think I'll list (in no particular order):
What types of music do you like? Is there any particular kind you like to listen to when you're writing?
People always assume I probably listen to Ratt or Whitesnake when I write, but I usually don't play any music while I'm typing. I used to be able to write, read, watch TV, listen to rock music, and talk on the phone (all at the same time), but I've lost that skill as I've grown older. If I do play music while I work, it's usually Fleetwood Mac, Steely Dan, the Beatles, or Black Sabbath IV.
If you had a book club, what would it be reading -- and why?
I don't understand book clubs.
What are your favorite kinds of books to give -- and get -- as gifts?
I don't like getting books as gifts. It always creates this weird pressure: You suddenly have to read some weird novel, because you know the person who gave it to you will ask what you thought of it. I don't want any gift that dictates my behavior.
Do you have any special writing rituals?
No.
What are you working on now?
I'm working on my third book, which is a nonfiction narrative titled Killing Yourself to Live: 85 Percent of a True Story. It's about love, death, and (to a lesser degree) Rod Stewart, KISS, and Radiohead.
Many writers are hardly "overnight success" stories. How long did it take for you to get where you are today? Any rejection-slip horror stories or inspirational anecdotes?
Actually, I was amazingly fortunate. Publishing a book was the hardest thing I'd ever done, but it was still way easier than I expected.
If you could choose one new writer to be "discovered," who would it be -- and why?
No idea. I'm not even sure what that means, to be honest. I mean, have I been "discovered"? And if so, when did that happen? How come nobody told me?
What tips or advice do you have for writers still looking to be discovered?
Don't believe anyone who praises you, and don't believe anyone who criticizes you. If you allow other people's opinions to affect how you view yourself, you'll never do anything.
For 6,557 miles, Chuck Klosterman thought about dying. He drove a rental car from New York to Rhode Island to Georgia to Mississippi to Iowa to Minneapolis to Fargo to Seattle, and he chased death and rock 'n' roll all the way. Within the span of twenty-one days, Chuck had three relationships end one by choice, one by chance, and one by exhaustion. He snorted cocaine in a graveyard. He walked a half-mile through a bean field. A man in Dickinson, North Dakota, explained to him why we have fewer windmills than we used to. He listened to the KISS solo albums and the Rod Stewart box set. At one point, poisonous snakes became involved. The road is hard. From the Chelsea Hotel to the swampland where Lynyrd Skynyrd's plane went down to the site where Kurt Cobain blew his head off, Chuck explored every brand of rock star demise. He wanted to know why the greatest career move any musician can make is to stop breathing...and what this means for the rest of us.
Klosterman follows up on 2003's Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs by expanding on an article he wrote for Spin about driving cross-country to visit several of America's most famous rock and roll death sites, from the Rhode Island club where more than 90 Great White fans died in a fire, to the Iowa field where Buddy Holly's plane crashed. Along the way, Klosterman opines on rock music, never afraid to offend-as when he interprets a Radiohead album as a 9/11 prophecy or reminds readers that before Kurt Cobain's suicide, many preferred Pearl Jam to Nirvana. The quest to uncover these deaths' social significance is quickly overwhelmed by Klosterman's personal obsessions, especially his agonizing over sexual relationships. He applies semifictional techniques to these concerns, inventing an imaginary conversation in the car with three girlfriends that becomes the book's centerpiece. This literary cleverness recalls classic gonzo journalism, but also contains a self-conscious edge, inviting comparison to Dave Eggers. Klosterman also worries his neuroses will brand him as "the male Elizabeth Wurtzel," but he needn't fret. Despite their shared subject matter of drug use and cultural musing, Klosterman has clearly established that he has a potent voice all his own. Agent, Daniel Greenburg. (July 19) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
An editor for SPIN magazine, Klosterman (Fargo Rock City) chronicles his journeys to the death sites of notable rock stars. Driving a Ford Taurus stocked with 600 CDs (many of dubious musical value), he begins his quest in New York City at the Chelsea Hotel, where Sid Vicious ostensibly murdered his girlfriend, Nancy Spungen. Then it's on to Rhode Island to view the scene of the nightclub fire that killed members of Great White, the American South where Duane Allman and members of Lynyrd Skynyrd perished, and Cedar Rapids, IA, to view the field of Buddy Holly, the Big Bopper, and Richie Valens's deaths. The trip ends in Seattle at Kurt Cobain's suicide spot. Writing in a stream-of-consciousness style, Klosterman talks more about himself than these famous ghosts; he tells stories about his family, his apparently good-looking female boss, his friends, and mostly his failed love life and doubts about his self-worth. In the process, he delivers a sometimes hilarious but ultimately superficial account of the meaning and challenges of everyday life. Recommended for general readers looking for entertainment. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 3/1/05.]-Dave Szatmary, Univ. of Washington, Seattle Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
A transcontinental road trip mostly along the byways and back roads of Spin magazine writer Klosterman's own head, resulting in an enjoyable, polyphonic interior monologue. Early on, you get the warning: this will have all the earmarks of a "reliance on self-indulgent, postmodern self-awareness" as Klosterman (Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs, 2003, etc.) fields an assignment to visit the death sites of a number of rock 'n' rollers, an odyssey that could yield some insight as to why death equals credibility and bestows messianic qualities in the world of rock, or why the greatest career move any musician can make is to stop breathing. And Klosterman does get around to taking a stab at the question-it says more about the fans than the artists-but he is chiefly interested in himself (though, happily, not in love with himself), engaging in extended riffs on his likes and dislikes in music and, most captivatingly, on the pathos of his love life (chimes of High Fidelity here, but readers will know that Klosterman has actually felt the sting, again and again). His brash honesty-"your entire existence as a rock critic is built around the process of reviewing your mail"-is shown both by an easeful descriptive talent as he drives from town to town, seeking the last place Duane Allman and Lynyrd Skynyrd, Kurt Cobain and Holly-Valens-Bopper saw the light of day, and by slices of dark humor (as when his sister accidentally hit a cow with her car "and the old sleepy-eyed heifer went down like Frazier getting tagged by Foreman"). He can also be exasperatingly logorrheic, but road-trippers are on a ramble, after all. Entertaining in a spontaneous, distracting way. When it ends, though, and Klosterman slamsshut the door to his head, most of what went before melts into air. Film rights to Karz Entertainment/New Line Cinema; author tour
Loading...New York/Dead Horses/Looking for Nothing
I am not qualified to live here.
I don't know what qualifications are necessary to live in any certain place at any given time, but I know I don't have them.
Ohio. I was qualified to live in Ohio. I like high school football. I enjoy Chinese buffet restaurants. I think the Pretenders' first record is okay. Living in Ohio was not outside my wheelhouse. But this place they call New York ... this place that Lou Reed incessantly described to no one in particular ... this place is more complicated. Everything is a grift, and everyone is a potential grifter. Before moving to Manhattan, I had only been here twice. Two days before I finally packed up my shit and left Akron, I had a phone conversation with the man who would be my immediate supervisor at Spin magazine, and I expressed my relocation insecurities. He tried to explain what my life here would be like; at the time, the only details I could remember about my two trips to New York were that (a) the bars didn't close until 4 A.M., and (b) there seemed to be an inordinate number of attractive women skulking about the street. "Don't let that fool you," my editor said as he (theoretically) stroked his Clapton-like beard. "I grew up in Minnesota, and I initially thought all the women in New York were beautiful, too. But here's the thing - a lot of them are just cute girls from the Midwest who get expensive haircuts and spend too much time at the gym." This confused me, because that seems to be the definition of what a beautiful woman is. However, I have slowly come to understand my bearded editor's pretzel logic: Sexuality is 15 percent real and 85 percent illusion. The first time I was here, it was February. I kept seeing thin women waiting for taxicabs, and they were all wearing black turtlenecks, black mittens, black scarves, and black stocking caps ... but no jackets. None of them wore jackets. It was 28 degrees. That attire (particularly within the context of such climatic conditions) can make any woman electrifying. Most of them were holding cigarettes, too. That always helps. I don't care what C. Everett Koop thinks. Smoking is usually a good decision.
Spin magazine is on the third floor of an office building on Lexington Avenue, a street often referred to as "Lex" by cast members of Law & Order. It is always the spring of 1996 in the offices of Spin; it will be the spring of 1996 forever. Just about everybody who works there looks like either (a) a member of the band Pavement, or (b) a girl who once dated a member of the band Pavement. The first time I walked into the office, three guys were talking about J Mascis for no apparent reason, and one of them was describing his guitar noodling as "trenchant." They had just returned from lunch. It was 3:30 P.M. I was the fifth-oldest person in the entire editorial department; I was 29.
I'm working on an untitled death project, and you are reading said project. Today, I will leave the offices of Spin and go to the Chelsea Hotel. Once I arrive there, I will ask people about the 1978 murder of Nancy Spungen, a woman whose ultra-annoying shriek was immortalized in the 1986 film Sid & Nancy. The "Sid" in that equation was (of course) Sid Vicious, the fabulously moronic bass player for the Sex Pistols and the alleged murderer of Nancy. Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert reviewed Sid & Nancy on their TV show At the Movies the week the film was released, and it was the first time I ever heard of the Sex Pistols. At the time, the Sex Pistols didn't interest me at all; I liked Van Halen. In 1987, a kid in my school told me I should listen to the Sex Pistols because they had an album called Flogging a Dead Horse, which was the kind of phrase I would have found noteworthy as a sophomore in high school. However, I didn't follow his advice; I liked Tesla. In 1989, I bought Never Mind the Bollocks on cassette because it was on sale, and it reminded me of Guns N' Roses. Johnny Rotten had an antiabortion song called "Bodies," yet he still aspired to be the Antichrist. This struck me as commonsense conservatism.
The chorus of the song "Pretty Vacant" is playing inside my skull as I saunter through the Spin offices, but it sounds as if the vocals are being sung by Gavin Rossdale. I pass the interns in sundresses, and the reformed riot grrrls making flight reservations, and at least three people who wish they were outside, smoking cigarettes. It's 2:59 P.M., and it's time for me to start finding some death.
My voyage into darkness has officially started: I am in the lobby, down the stairs, out the street exit, and into the stupefying heat. New York summers are hotter than summers in Atlanta. Now, I realize the temperature is higher in Atlanta and Atlanta has more humidity, and things like temperature and humidity are extensions of science, and science is never wrong. But Manhattan is a hipster kiln, and that makes all the difference; heat is 15 percent real and 85 percent perception. The ground is hot, the brick buildings are hot, the sky is low, people are pissed off, and everything smells like sweat and vomit and liquefied garbage. It's a full-on horror show, and I have learned to despise July. People at Spin ridicule me for wearing khaki shorts to work, always insisting that I look like a tourist. I don't care. We're all tourists, sort of. Life is tourism, sort of. As far as I'm concerned, the dinosaurs still hold the lease on this godforsaken rock.
It takes me 45 seconds to get a cab on Lex, and now I'm moving west, haltingly. I've been to Chelsea, but I don't really know where it starts and where it ends; I realize I'm there only if (a) someone tells me so, or (b) I find myself in a Thai restaurant and suddenly notice that everyone working there is a pre-op transvestite. This traffic sucks, but we're getting there; with each progressive block, things look cheaper and older, like B-roll footage from Sesame Street. Ten minutes ago, I was drinking Mountain Dew in Spin's self-conscious 1996; now I'm driving through an accidental incarnation of 1976. It's the summer of 2003. I've traveled down three vertical floors, across four horizontal blocks, and through five spheres of reality.
Perhaps you are wondering why I am starting this project at the Chelsea and not the Dakota, the hotel where John Lennon was assassinated in 1980; part of me is wondering that, too. Lennon's killing is undoubtedly the most famous murder in rock history, and it's something I actually know about: I know how many Beatles tapes Mark David Chapman had in his jacket when he shot Lennon in the chest (14), and I know the score of that evening's NFL Monday Night Football game, when Howard Cosell announced the assassination on-air (Miami 16, New England 13 - in overtime). I know that Chapman slowly came to believe that he actually was John Lennon (going so far as to marry a woman of Japanese descent who was four years his senior), and I remember my dad dismissing the murder at supper the following evening, bemoaning the fact that a musician's death somehow warranted more publicity than the unexpected death of Pope John Paul I. As an eight-year-old, I was confused by Lennon's death, mostly because I could not understand why everyone was so enamored with a rock band's rhythm guitarist; for some reason, I was under the misguided impression that Paul McCartney was the only member of the Beatles who sang. I felt no sadness about the event. As I get older, the murder seems crazier and crazier but not necessarily more tragic; I don't think I have ever been moved by the death of a public figure. I do think about what it would have been like if John Lennon had lived, and sometimes I worry that he would have made a terrible MTV Unplugged in 1992. But Lennon is not someone I need to concern myself with today; today, I am totally punk rock. My boss is requiring me to think like a punk. I am tempted to spit on a stranger in protest of the lagging British economy.
My boss at Spin (a striking blonde woman named Sia Michel) strongly suggested that I go to the Chelsea Hotel because "our readers" love punk rock. This fact is hard to refute; I am probably the only employee in the history of Spin magazine who thinks punk rock - in almost every context, and with maybe one exception - is patently ridiculous. Still, the death of Spungen intrigues me; Sid and Nancy's relationship forever illustrates the worst part of being in love with anyone, which is that people in love can't be reasoned with.
Sid Vicious was not the original bassist for the Pistols; he joined the band after they fired original member Glen Matlock. The only thing everyone seems to know about Vicious is that he could not play bass at all. Ironically (or perhaps predictably), Sid's inability to play his instrument is the single most crucial element in the history of punk; he is the example everyone uses (consciously or unconsciously) when advocating the import of any musical entity that is not necessarily musical. The fact that he could not do something correctly - yet still do it significantly - is all that anyone needs to know about punk rock. That notion is punk rock, completely defined in one sentence. It's like that scene in The Breakfast Club, where nerd caricature Anthony Michael Hall explains why he considered suicide after failing to make a fully functioning elephant lamp in shop class, prompting Judd Nelson to call him an idiot. "So I'm a fucking idiot because I can't make a lamp?" Hall's character asks. "No," says Nelson. "You're a genius because you can't make a lamp." Sid Vicious was a musical genius because he couldn't play music, which is probably an unreasonable foundation to build one's life on. Which only grew worse when he met a terrible person and decided his love for her was so intense that she needed to die.
Spungen was from Philadelphia, a city whose sports fans throw D batteries at Santa Claus and cheer when opposing wide receivers are temporarily paralyzed. Since Nancy was not a celebrity in the traditional sense (she had no talent, per se, though neither did Sid), Chloe Webb's portrayal of her in the aforementioned Sid & Nancy is the image most modern people have of her. As such, she is generally remembered as the most annoying human of the late 20th century. She was (at best) a drug-addled groupie. But what matters about her interaction with Vicious is the way they destroyed each other in such an obvious - and social - manner. And what I mean by "social" is that everyone who knew them had to exist inside the walls of their destruction; as far as I can tell, every single one of Sid's friends despised Nancy Spungen. This, of course, is common. Everybody has had the experience of loathing a friend's girlfriend. My second year in college, I had a goofy little roommate everyone loved; sadly, he had a girlfriend that everyone hated. Her own friends hated her. Even my roommate seemed to hate her, because all they ever did was fight and attempt to hit each other with half-empty cans of Dr Pepper. She had no redeeming qualities; there was nothing about her that was physically, intellectually, or ideologically attractive. We all implored my roommate to break up with her. It was a bizarre situation because he would agree with us 99 percent of the time; we would say she was fat and whiny and uninspiring, and he would concede all three points. Sid Vicious was the same way; he once described Spungen as "the kind of girl who licked out toilets." But Sid wouldn't break up with Nancy, and my roommate didn't break up with his potato-sack sweetheart for almost three years. There is something sickeningly attractive about being in a bad relationship; you start feeding off the unhappiness. It becomes darkly interesting. Supposedly, Sid (as a 16-year-old) once told his mother, "Mum, I don't know what people see in sex. I don't get anything out of it." That sentiment explains everything. If you find sex unsatisfying, you need something to take its place. You need a problem. Nancy was a good problem for Sid. Heroin was also a good problem for Sid. The only problem is that good problems are still problems, and Mr. Vicious was just not designed for problem solving. His genius scheme was to move himself and Nancy into Room 100 of the Chelsea in August of '78, where they could stay high for the rest of their lives. This kind of (but not really) worked for two months, until he (almost certainly) stabbed Nancy, who was wearing only a bra and panties, and watched her bleed to death underneath the bathroom sink. Vicious purposefully OD'd on smack before the case ever went to trial, so I suppose we'll never really know what happened in that room, though he did tell the police, "I did it because I'm a dirty dog." This is not a very convincing alibi. He may as well have said, "I got 99 problems, but a bitch ain't one."
When I finally walk into the Chelsea, I can't decide if I'm impressed or underwhelmed; I can't tell if this place is nicer or crappier than I anticipated (I guess I had no preconceived notion). There are two men behind the reception desk: an older man with a beard and a younger man who might be Hispanic. I ask the bearded man if anyone is staying in Room 100, and - if it's unoccupied - if I can see what it looks like.
"There is no Room 100," he tells me. "They converted it into an apartment 18 years ago. But I know why you're asking."
For the next five minutes, these two gentlemen and I have a conversation about Sid Vicious, mostly focused on how he was an idiot. However, there are certainly lots of people who disagree with us: Patrons constantly come to this hotel with the hope of staying in the same flat where an unlikable, opportunistic woman named Nancy was murdered for no valid reason. The staff is not thrilled by this tradition ("We hate it when people ask about this," says the younger employee. "Be sure you write that down: We hate it when people ask us about this."). I ask the bearded gentleman what kind of person aspires to stay in a hotel room that was once a crime scene.
"It tends to be younger people - the kind of people with colored hair. But we did have one guy come all the way from Japan, only to discover that Room 100 doesn't even exist anymore. The thing is, Johnny Rotten was a musician; Sid Vicious was a loser. So maybe his fans want to be losers, too."
While we are having this discussion, an unabashedly annoyed man interjects himself into the dialogue; this man is named Stanley Bard, and he has been the manager of the Chelsea Hotel for more than 40 years. He does not want me talking to the hotel staff and asks me into his first-floor office. Bard is balding and swarthy and serious, and he sternly tells me I should not include the Chelsea Hotel in this article.
"I understand what you think you are trying to do, but I do not want the Chelsea Hotel associated with this story," says Bard, his arms crossed as he sits behind a cluttered wooden desk. "Sid Vicious didn't die here. It was just his girlfriend, and she was of no consequence. The kind of person who wants to stay in Room 100 is just a cultic follower. These are people who have nothing to do. If you want to understand what someone fascinated by Sid Vicious is looking for, go find those people. You will see that they are not serious-minded people. You will see that they are not trying to understand anything about death. They are looking for nothing."
At this point, he politely tells me to leave the Chelsea Hotel. And after we shake hands, that is what I do.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from Killing Yourself to Live by Chuck Klosterman Copyright © 2005 by Chuck Klosterman. Excerpted by permission.
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