Duncan Hannah was born in Minneapolis in 1952. He attended Bard College from 1971 to 1973 and Parsons School of Design from 1973 to 1975. His work is in numerous public and private collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Minneapolis Art Institute.
"A phantasmagoria of alcohol, sex, art, conversation, glam rock,
and New Wave cinema. Hannah's writing combines self-aware humor
with an intoxicating punk energy." -The New Yorker
"A farewell to an entire era of decadence. . . . An unusually
levelheaded portrait of New York in the seventies." -The Paris
Review
"Filled with gritty, evocative memories." -Vice
"A gallery of the louche, the lurid, and the illuminating."
-Vanity Fair
"These diaries . . . are like the Dead Sea Scrolls of a
mythological Lower Manhattan underground. As the writing progresses
. . . we glean Duncan's romance and eventual providence: to be cool
is not the idea, being an artist in love with the universe is."
-Thurston Moore, co-founder of Sonic Youth
"In which a teenage Minnesota boy is drawn into the swirl of
downtown New York in the 70s - yeah, lots of sex, drugs, rock n
roll and art! Hannah's personal documents become an accumulation of
detailed cultural insights as he too becomes an accomplished
artist. Complete with 'guest appearances' by just about everyone
who defined the explosive scene of this period." -Jim Jarmusch
"Twentieth-Century Boy provide[s] a rich, endlessly
diverting answer to the question 'What do men want?' These
journals-full of hunger, curiosity, and wonder-are raw, graceful
time capsules. Art, sex, ambition, drugs, music, alcohol, movies,
excesses, and extremes are all there, but Hannah observes the world
around him with rare, and loving, attention." -Joan Juliet Buck
"Hannah documents that impetuous, drugged-up scene with flushed
revelry and latent apprehension. These journals, simultaneously
breathtaking and detached, are riveting cautionary tales,
demonstrating the necessity of raw experimentation as a source of
discovery and creativity." -Bookforum
"Eloquent and funny, written by a teen wise beyond his years.
Duncan Hannah's journals bring back the adolescence that most of us
wish we had." -Gillian McCain, coauthor of Please Kill
Me
"Hannah's book illuminates this last great bohemia. . . . How
fortunate that [he] managed to stagger home to bed to . . .
immortalise his passage through this starry vortex." -The Art
Newspaper
"So brilliant, so sexy, so real." -Danny Fields
"Terrific! Delightfully funny, written with great candor." -Michael
Lindsay-Hogg, director of Let It Be
"[A] hugely entertaining diary." -John Berendt, author of
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
"A portrait of someone in love with and endlessly intrigued by the
world around him. . . . Hannah has survived the seventies. More
than that, he has kept them alive, in ink." -The Globe and Mail
(Toronto)
"Hannah's . . . good looks, talent, determination, and . . . his
absolute willingness to test the human body's capacities for
alcohol, drugs, and (especially) sex . . . make us exceedingly
fortunate that he wrote everything down. The other great joy . . .
, apart from the splendor of all that excess, is the straight-line,
crisp, beautiful nonchalance of his style." -Peter Straub, author
of Ghost Story
"A dandy, a flaneur, a rock 'n' roll wastrel wandering Candide-like
through the dangerous undercurrents of the 1970s: if Duncan Hannah
didn't exist, you'd have to invent him." -Jon Savage, author of
England's Dreaming and 1966
"A breezy, demotically precise portrait of Bowie-and-Warhol New
York." -Los Angeles Review of Books
"An American literary classic. . . . Twentieth-Century Boy
reads like a carefully crafted work of art. Savvy readers might be
inclined to see it as literary kin to James Joyce's classic, A
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. . . . [It] offers a
fast-paced record of a time and a place unlike [any] other."
-New York Journal of Books
"That these pages were written by a raw boy painter and not an
eminence grise master of the art of memoir is key to their magic
and mystery. A Pillow Book from a decade when no one ever slept."
-Brad Gooch
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