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Lucking Out: My Life Getting Down and Semi-Dirty in the Seventies [Paperback]

James Wolcott

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Book Description

Oct 2 2012

From one of our most admired (and feared) cultural critics, a memoir that captures all the gritty, grubby glamour of New York in the awful/wonderful Seventies.

In the autumn of 1972, a very young and green James Wolcott arrived in New York from Maryland, full of literary dreams, equipped with a letter of introduction from Norman Mailer, and having no idea what was about to hit him. Landing at a time of accelerating municipal squalor and, paradoxically, gathering cultural energy in all spheres as "Downtown" became a category of art and life unto itself, he embarked upon his sentimental education, seventies New York style. This portrait of a critic as a young man is also a rollicking, acutely observant portrait of a legendary time and place. Mixing grit and glitter in just the right proportions, suffused with affection for the talented and sometimes half-crazed denizens of the scene, it will make readers long for a time when you really could get mugged around here.


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Review

A Slate Best Book of the Year

Praise for Lucking Out:

“Very sharp and very funny.” —The New York Times

The Village Voice in the 1970s, Patti Smith and the punk scene, porno theaters in Times Square, Pauline Kael and her acolytes—New York City journalism at its gossipy best.”
Slate

“Superb.”
The Wall Street Journal
 
“[A] swooping carnival ride of a book. . . . Compared with James Wolcott, most literary journalists write like Amish farmers, their sentences plain as bib overalls. . . . Memoirs don’t come more entertaining than this.”
Washington Post

“Here is a young writer’s journey through that shitty, wonderful New York of yore, the one that’s been marketed and re-enacted and curated almost out of actuality, but really did exist. James Wolcott’s tough, stylish and genuine criticism has always been indispensable, but even so this book is revelatory in its intimacy, its sharpness and humor, and its grim good cheer. To experience this era through Wolcott’s worldview and prose is a true pleasure.”
—Sam Lipsyte, author of The Ask
 
“I gobbled up Lucking Out, reading it in one sitting. It’s a candid, hysterically funny seventies memoir of downtown and uptown Manhattan, by one of the few sober guys in the room.”
—Legs McNeil, coauthor of Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk
 
“What ultimately makes this book so vital is its documentation of one writer’s beginnings. Beneath the scrapbook of memories lies a sneaky defense of a scrappy literary life that is in danger of fading into the same oblivion as Mohawk haircuts and black leather jackets adorned with safety pins.”
Los Angeles Times
 
“Wolcott captures the sense of outlaw possibility and physical menace in a city that has ‘gone to hell,’ [but] his book is also something else: a tale of survival in one of the city’s more peculiar tribes. . . . Though today’s New York is outwardly more generic, much hasn’t changed, especially how most of us are still lucking out.”
The New Yorker’s Book Bench
 
“Who better to guide us through one of our most irresistible moments—New York in the Seventies—than one of our most irresistible critics, James Wolcott? Here is an intimate, delicious chronicle of America’s greatest city in full cultural bloom and total municipal decay. It’s Rome Before the Fall, and Wolcott, a hilarious and penetrating writer, captures it in all of its seedy, seductive glamour.”
—Jonathan Mahler, author of Ladies and Gentlemen, the Bronx Is Burning
 
“An adventurous intellectual spy report. . . . From Pauline Kael’s opinion of hetero porn movies to the gay ‘trucks,’ from the New York City Ballet to CBGB’s, Wolcott delightfully proves that critics have feelings too.”
—John Waters
 
“A superb eyewitness account of New York in the raw. James Wolcott scrapes the barnacles off the 1970s and reveals a gem—a decadent time that somehow seems innocent today. His joyride vividly captures the circus of druggies, punks and geniuses with their driving needs to express themselves.”
—Ivan Kral, cofilmmaker of The Blank Generation and guitarist for the Patti Smith Group
 
“A sleek, funny memoir. . . . Rough joy is borne out in Wolcott’s bubbling pace, in his invariable preference for amusing modesty over mythological grandeur, and, most admirably, in the delicate candor with which he treats the cruelty and competitive savagery of that decade in New York.”
—Dave Hickey, author of Air Guitar
 
“Any book that includes Milt Kamen, Patti Smith, the New York City Ballet, and Ugly George has already proven its worth as the record of a cultural moment. But I’d rather recommend it for the way Wolcott reminds us that what is right about something is often harder to explain than what is wrong, and that humility in the presence of real art offers us a path to keener discernment and higher excitement. In cynical times like ours, this generous book is a gift.”
—Michael Tolkin, author of The Player

"Lucking Out: My Life Getting Down And Semi-Dirty In Seventies New York lays out its time vividly; the various milieus Wolcott describes are clear and memorable.”
Onion A.V. Club

"Grunge, glitz, and gossip decorate this lively...memoir....Wolcott cameos celebrities from Bob Dylan and Gore Vidal--he doesn't so much drop names as spike them like a running back in the end zone--to the glamorous, squalid city itself, with its crime and crazies and open-air gay trysting....Wolcott's take on New York culture itself, from schlubby porn impresarios to diaphanous ballerinas, is entertaining and evocative."
Publishers Weekly

"No fan of memoirs, Vanity Fair cultural critic Wolcott has nonetheless written one about his wonder years in New York City in the 1970s. Given his role as tastemaker in writing about music, movies, television, and books, Wolcott presents both a self-portrait as a novice arts journalist and a portrait gallery of the scene makers during the heyday of consequences-be-damned criticism. With some offhand encouragement from Norman Mailer, Wolcott quixotically quit college, moved to New York, and badgered his way into a job at the then enormously influential Village Voice. His hilarious account of his trial by fire at this veritable “gladiator school” for journalism is acidly revealing of the dynamics at work in crisis-riddled New York, a crucible for gutsy creativity. Wolcott incisively celebrates such key figures as Patti Smith and David Byrne, caustically annihilates prominent writers, and praises to the skies his guiding light, film critic extraordinaire Pauline Kael. A work of mettlesome personal remembrance and piercing cultural history, Wolcott’s electrifying tale of the forging of a writer can also serve as a course on writing laser-precise and propulsive prose."
Booklist

"Longtime Vanity Fair cultural critic Wolcott (Attack Poodles and Other Media Mutants, 2004, etc.) celebrates the Big Apple as a haven for the writers, artists, musicians and eccentrics who thrived at its core in the 1970s. Of the many sentences in Wolcott’s memoir that will have contemporary Manhattan-philes gnashing their teeth in envy is this one recounting how the author dealt with losing his on-site staff job at the Village Voice: “From that point onward I never worked a regular office job again, solely writing for a living, something that would have been impossible if New York hadn’t been a city of low rents and crappy expectations that didn’t require a trust fund or a six-figure income for the privilege of watching everything fall apart before your eyes.” Actually, the entire book is not only a bittersweet valentine to a much-maligned era but a model of exemplary prose that any writer would do well to study. Wolcott’s talent for choosing words, shaping sentences, constructing paragraphs and crafting each of the five sections into an essay that stands on its own reveals an architectonic approach lacking in many current memoirs. The author also understands how to apply his individual experiences to the larger context of the zeitgeist. For example, the section entitled “Bodily Contact” weaves personal encounters into a critique of “Me Decade” sexual mores, drawing on Bob Fosse films, the seedy atmosphere of pre–tourist friendly Times Square, the emerging gay-rights movement and concerns about the dark side of the pick-up culture prevalent at both straight and gay bars. Wolcott also rubbed shoulders with the luminaries of the day, including his mentor, the rabble-rousing author Norman Mailer, punk songstress Patti Smith and legendary movie critic Pauline Kael. His poignant reminiscences of Kael pave the way for the book’s plaintive conclusion. Gives the lie to the belief that the ’70s contained nothing but disco decadence and self-help solipsism."
Kirkus Reviews (starred)

About the Author

JAMES WOLCOTT is a longtime columnist and blogger for Vanity Fair. He is the author of a novel, The Catsitters, and the non­fiction work Attack Poodles and Other Media Mutants. He lives in New York with his wife, the critic and novelist Laura Jacobs, and their three ocicats, Jasper, Henry, and Veronica.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 3.9 out of 5 stars  19 reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Homeboy Makes Good, Sort of Jan 16 2012
By Thomas C. Quinn - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is the second book I have read by someone from the Appalachian hinterland where much of my family has lived for some time, the first being Henry Gates' "Colored People" about growing up as an African-American across the state line around Keyser, WV. For me, growing up in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, DC and attending the University of Maryland in the 70s, I was well aware of Frostburg State College which one of my cousins attended. Later on in the 90s the older generation of my family retired to this area. Thus it was a pleasant surprise to see a piece in Vanity Fair about someone with these humble roots who had risen to some success in feature journalism.

Unlike Gates' work, however, this book is a disappointment. After the first chapter, the book veers off from its autobiographical chronology upon the author's being fired by the Village Voice, a job he had obtained based on a long-shot letter he wrote to Norman Mailer with which he included his review for the college newspaper, State to Date, of a televised joust Mailer had with Gore Vidal and others on the Dick Cavett Show in 1971. Armed with Mailer's introduction, Wolcott has the pluck and determination to go to New York and tough it out until he gets the hired by the Voice, initially in a clerical position.

After being fired and going to the unemployment line, we are parachuted into Wolcott's suddenly becoming one of Pauline Kael's young proteges accompanying her to private reviewer showings of mainstream films; although a less kind, but more accurate characterization from the text, would be that of one who was a groupie or "hanger on". Later, after a narrow take on the punk rock scene, the book meanders through first-inexplicably-a discussion of pornography and then ballet. As someone who is the same age as the author and who lived through this period, I found the book's focus narrow and superficial, even on its own terms as an ostensible memoir and human interest story. How did the author survive day to day after his being fired? Surely there must have been some "day jobs" down the line or was this simply a sudden and seamless transmigration of the author from the student underclass to the haute bourgoisie? Tied in with that, as other reviewers have noted, is his pretentious use of obscure verbiage and name dropping to the point of the text becoming a tiresome quagmire of pedantry by its middle section, a sophomoric style notably absent in the first section of the book that was reviewed and edited by the staff at Vanity Fair for magazine publication.

This book needs to be reworked from the second chapter onward with more of a candid and plainly written focus on the author's personal struggles with a broader focus on the youth culture of the time. A good book in this vein set in the early 90s that I stumbled onto recently is the entertaining "Wannabe" by Everett Weinberger that chronicles the struggle of a young Stanford MBA to break into the production side of Hollywood without success (although he has gone on to a comfortable career on Wall St). This story, if not exactly in extremis to the point of Candide, is a cautionary tale that is a franker, more realistic and absorbing take on youthful ambition for fame and wealth than Lucking Out's latter day Horatio Alger tale is.
18 of 24 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Huh? Dec 17 2011
By She Who Reads - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Having been an admirer of Wolcott's writing since his Voice days, I looked forward to reading this memoir. What a disillusion. Since he lived as a self-described solitary during this period who spent his time on the fringes of things (always standing or sitting at the back of the room), observing, it's a tough slog of a read.

Just can't imagine many general readers caring about office politics at the Village Voice, fringe critic Lester Bangs, punk rock at CBGSs, why ballet makes him woozy, the seamy 70s porn scene, etc. Wolcott forged a relationship with movie critic Pauline Kael. Dare I call it a friendship? He comes off as her lapdog who accompanied her to screenings and undoubtedly nodded assent to everything that came out of her mouth.

Wolcott is watcher, not a doer. Nothing wrong with that as his brilliant columns and shrewd observations attest, but he clearly makes the case that, away from an object to be evaluated, there is nothing more for him to write about.
10 of 14 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Milky Odalisques Floating In The Zeitgeist & Similar Nov 30 2011
By Joel Graber - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Account of the New York cultural scene, primarily downtown Manhattan, in the seventies, not mainly a memoir - Wolcott is circumspect about himself - but descriptive of specific contexts, writing for the Village Voice, paling around with New Yorker movie critic Pauline Kael, late nights at CBGB.

Somewhat Zelig-style, or at least fortuitously, the author dropped out of a minor state college, after Norman Mailer improbably responded to a fan letter, and wormed his way onto the Voice. Also by luck, Wolcott became a mascot for Kael, 33 years his senior, carrying her bag to screenings. On the Bowery, he became superficially acquainted with luminaries David Byrne & Patti Smith in early career.

The author's style attempts not particularly deep thoughts/observations, by simile, metaphor, and inventive figures of speech. He is so irrepressible the book drowns in incomprehensible flourishes; few of the 258 pages escape writer's tourettes. In Wolcott's telling, for example, the aged Anais Nin had "a peacock feather that literary fashion has left behind," but "was a prefeminist odalisque idol," as well as a "milky apparition," although even as "narcissism [was] slathered [against her] like moisturizing lotion . . . she swanned through the Village like the last dollop of dyed splendor . . . in a world of screeching tires and clogged sinuses" ( p. 22). Those who like this sort of thing should read on; others should stand warned.

For no apparent reason, there follows from downtown a long section about seventies porn, Times Square theatres and VHS, hardly lucking out. Then a section on the "slow, unmerciful massacre" of HIV/AIDS. Moving uptown to Lincoln Center, the author rhapsodizes about the New York City Ballet, with nary a mention of, for example, Robert Wilson (see Einstein On The Beach with Philip Glass at the Met in 1976). So much for avant-garde.

There are many interesting anecdotes; omitting the flamboyance would shorten the book by perhaps a third.

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