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Patti Smithâs album début album, âHorses,â came out fifty years ago, on November 10, 1975, launching her to stardom almost overnight. An anniversary reissue came out this year, to rapturous reviews. Yet being a rock star was never Smithâs intention: she was a published poet before âHorsesâ was released, and had also written a play with Sam Shepard. Music was an afterthought, as she tells it, a way to make her poetry readings pop. âI didnât want to be boring,â she tells David Remnick. In recent years, it may finally be that more people know Smith as a writer than as a musician. Her memoir âJust Kids,â about her friendship with the late photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, won a National Book Award. âM Trainâ reflected on her withdrawal from music as she raised a family. In her newest memoir, âBread of Angels,â Smith writes intimately about the loss of her husband, her brother, and close friends; she also shares a startling revelation about her family and past. Itâs a book that was challenging for her and took her years to write. âI write profuselyâfiction, fairy tales, all kinds of things that arenât even publishedâwithout a care,â she says. âWriting a memoir, bringing other people into it, one has to really be prudent, and search themselves and make sure that theyâre presenting the right picture.â
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