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Lydia Lunch

Autor(a) de Paradoxia: A Predator's Diary

31+ Works 550 Membros 9 Críticas 2 Favorited

About the Author

Lydia Lunch was born in 1959 in Rochester, New York. She enjoyed art, and expressed this interest through music with the punk rock band Teenage Jesus and the Jerks. She also appeared with the bands Beirut Slump, 8 Eyed Spy, the Devil Dogs, Harry Crews and Shotgun Wedding. Along with Richard Kern, mostrar mais she shot a film about abuse addiction called The Right Side of My Brain. Lunch writes about the dark side of sex, drugs, and violence in the books Paradoxia: A Predator's Diary, Adulterers Anonymous and Incriminating Evidence: The Collected Writings of Lydia Lynch. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos

Includes the name: Лидия Ланч

Image credit: Flickr user Starphuk (2005)

Obras por Lydia Lunch

Paradoxia: A Predator's Diary (1997) 155 exemplares
Sin-a-rama : sleaze sex paperbacks of the sixties (2005) — Editor — 118 exemplares
Adulterers Anonymous (1982) 70 exemplares
Incriminating Evidence (1992) 52 exemplares
Will Work for Drugs (2009) 41 exemplares
Toxic Gumbo (1998) — Autor — 30 exemplares
So Real It Hurts (2019) 24 exemplares
Gun is Loaded (2008) 10 exemplares
AS-FIX-E-8 (1993) 5 exemplares
Lydia Lunch Bloodsucker (1992) 4 exemplares
Adulterers Anonymous II (2001) 2 exemplares
Queen of Siam (2003) 2 exemplares

Associated Works

Angry Women (1991) — Contribuidor — 371 exemplares
No Wave: Post-Punk. Underground. New York. 1976-1980. (2008) — Introdução — 114 exemplares
Istanbul Noir (2008) — Contribuidor — 97 exemplares
Noirotica 2: Pulp Friction (1997) — Contribuidor — 14 exemplares
Punk Fiction: An Anthology of Short Stories Inspired by Punk (2009) — Contribuidor — 12 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome canónico
Lunch, Lydia
Nome legal
Koch, Lydia Anne
Data de nascimento
1959-06-02
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
USA
Local de nascimento
Rochester, New York, USA
Locais de residência
New York, New York, USA
Barcelona, Spain
Ocupações
singer
poet
actor
writer

Membros

Críticas

Bonne littérature punk, bien féministe, trash et que du sexe.
Pas passionnant, se lit vraiment comme un journal, et non comme un roman. Intéressant à lire.
 
Assinalado
hubarnaud | Jul 8, 2020 |
As I read Lydia Lunch's autobiography, "Paradoxia: A Predator's Diary", I kept thinking two things: a. wow, she's been through a lot of things in her life so far, and b. she's not on planet Earth.

This book, which is a short collection of articles, ruminations, interviews, and monographs on a variety of subjects—including some poetry—is much more bound down.

Lunch being Lunch, is not dinner; nor dog food. Caustic is the word that drips throughout these different stories. As Anthony Bourdain says in his introduction:

Lydia Lunch has, she says, never felt shame. She has loudly, consistently, and with astonishing persistence told the world what she thinks—giving exactly zero fucks what the world thought in return. Since arriving in New York in 1976, the product of an abusive and epically awful childhood, she has been nobody’s victim. She became, instead, a self-described predator, never stopping, always hunting—cutting a swath through the cultural jungle as the leader of the band Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, a performance artist, an underground film icon, and a truly extraordinary writer.

During a period that is still considered a golden time for art, music, and transgression, she was always the smartest person in the room, which is rarely a comfortable thing to be. She continues to write sentences so ballistically perfect, so lethally designed, that they always hit their targets—and with deadly effect.


It's easier to get into Lunch's oeuvre by digging into it:

We did not need an election. We needed an insurrection. An absolute overthrow of a corrupt cabal, a kleptocratic corporate cock-ocracy that pisses on the poor, wages endless wars, bankrupts entire nations, and has an incarceration rate that is in itself criminal: 5 percent of the world’s population; 25 percent of the world’s prisoners; 65 million Americans with criminal records, mostly for petty drug charges; 2.3 million in correctional facilities; 6.5 million on parole. And you wanted me to vote. You’re fucking joking, right?


That paragraph, to me, is indicative of Lunch's main strength as a writer; she's straightforward, almost exact, and doesn't give a toss about others think. She gives herself off as libertine, multi-dimensional, and manifest.

Even some of her one-liners are exact and cut away debris:

I admit it: the American way of life has turned me into a death-defying murder junkie where all the killers are heroes.


At the worst of times, I think Lunch wants to kick up dirt just because she's bored; her writing bears the hallmarks of the easily bored and ready-to-burst person. At the best of times, just that works to her advantage. Her writing is also a lot more on point nowadays than it ever has been, and more coherent:

My maternal instincts kick in to spite me. I hate to hear babies cry. Hell, I hate to hear anyone cry. It’s the most obnoxious form of noise pollution. And if all it takes to temporarily abate this skin-crawling caterwaul is one fell swoop and a snatch that lifts the little bantamweight crying time bomb into my arms, a quick tight squeeze, and a peck on the cheek, who am I to argue? After all, “mother” knows best.

Which both amazes and horrifies the real birth mother, who enjoys the respite, yet whose first instinct is to grab the little critter and flee as far away as humanly possible from this obviously over-sexualized baby freak, rescuing her precious little angel from unforeseen and imaginary evil, fearing an even more [re]percussive backlash, a rendition of The Terror of Tiny Town’s latest lung-busting operetta. Mommy usually gives in, baby wins out, and I’m stuck playing bouncy-wouncy with the twenty-pound flesh ball for the next eight hours. Not a problem. I understand children. It’s their mothers I can’t fucking stand.


Her monograph about insomnia recalled William S. Burroughs for me:

I gave up nicotine, sugar, and spice, and I even tried a light box. Didn’t help. I quit coffee. Ha! Anyone who has suffered from decades-long insomnia knows damn well that that ain’t gonna last. You need all the caffeine you can suck down to function above that semi-somnambulant state of dream-deprived sleep that results in a numb narcosis, a permanent twilight zone, rarely fully conscious, never completely asleep. Exhausted, but jacked up, like an electric rigor mortis that short-circuits the neurotransmitters, creating a dense fog of chronic irritation that can cloud even the simplest of tasks.


Some of her paragraphs read like the best of Hunter S. Thompson:

I woke up bloody and puking. Projectile vomiting. All over the table. All over his dope. All over his boots. Down the front of my slip. Great heaving waves of gelatinous funk shooting out of my mouth and nose. Thick rich fists of sour phlegm cascading in golden arcs all over the room. I pissed myself and started to laugh. The bastard had almost killed me. I’d never done heroin. He knew that. It just wasn’t my trip. I wasn’t looking for nirvana, a velvet womb, or a soft euphoric haze of interstellar space to melt into. I dug the shit that jacked up the irritation level. Barbs and booze. Coke or speed. LSD. Something that accelerated my already jacked-up metabolism. I wasn’t interested in slowing shit down. Smoothing it out. Softening the edges. I wanted to keep the edges rough, like the one I had just hit my head against. The one that had finally banged a bit of sense into my thick nugget. Never, under any circumstances, will I ever again answer the door at 5:45 a.m. on a Sunday morning.


Sure, she may lack the erudition that both blighted and elated writing from people like Jean Genet, Burroughs, and even Hubert Selby Jr.—an interview with whom is included in this book—but that often works for her, when she keeps her mind together; that's merely how I personally feel.

Her monograph about Herbert Huncke enlightened me of his existence. Her short interview with Selby Jr. is nice, mainly because it's good and doesn't drag on. I don't know if she has it, but I think her seeming sense of getting bored quickly is something that also is her biggest self-made blessing.

Ladies, how did we manage to devolve from sacred prostitutes to corporate whores? From warrior queens to pop porn princesses? We’ve gone from Kali to Courtney Love, from Medusa to Madonna, from Lilith to Liv Tyler, from Emma Goldman to Uma Thurman, from Angela Davis to Lil’ Kim, from Patty Hearst to Paris fucking Hilton.


Her public speech on Donald Trump and his running legacy of kleptocracy is beauteous to read:

And how fucking appropriate for this blustering baboon to name his son Barron. BARRON! More like barren, which is what this country is going to be after instating an idiot pawn, who denies climate change while sucking on big industry’s dick for the better part of his so-called career, as head of the Environmental Protection Agency as floods, mudslides, hurricanes, tornadoes, volcanoes and natural disasters proliferate, incurring billions of dollars in disaster relief that will never be paid to average homeowners, who barely have $500 of savings in their bank accounts. As the criminal cabal in the White House just passed a $700 billion defense budget, making America’s military larger than that of China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, the UK, France, India, and Japan combined.


All in all, this is a short, highly potent, and not-giving-a-fuck anthology of writing from Lydia Lunch. Read it, act, and move on to her music.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
pivic | Mar 23, 2020 |
List price: $35. Suggested sale price: $___&
A rare classic of the cookbook genre featuring legendary underground iconic musician and performing artist, Lydia Lunch. Through music, literature and multimedia performances she relentlessly continues her creative assaults is against complacency with biting humor, a razor-sharp wit, and a hardcore DIY-or- die aesthetic.
First Universe edition with full number line. Softcover, in like new condition. Slight water damage on first title page (from being on display in my kitchen next to the humidifier over the last 6 years or so. Otherwise the binding is tight, pages are clean and unmarked.
To follow is an excerpt from the Introduction, written by Lydia Lunch.
"... Even during the poverty-stricken days of the late 1970s and early 1980s, when I lived in tenement slums on New York's Lower East Side and Spanish Harlem and later in a funky loft in downtown Brooklyn, once a month or so, I'd managed to scrape up enough loose change to host a dinner party or throw a Sunday brunch. I took great pleasure in cooking for and feeding other starving artists and struggling minstrels. Sonic Youth, Henry Rollins, Suicide, Joe Coleman, Butthole Surfers, and a roving cast of underground miscreants all were there at one time or another to gorge at my beggars banquet. Nothing fancy. Tabouleh and curried chickpeas. Pasta. BBQ chicken when I could afford it. Simple, delicious, nutritious food combined with spirited conversation, great music, and a sense of communal bliss had everyone floating on a natural high, their endorphins racing into overdrive. After all, everybody loves you when you feed them. And I love to spread the love. As long as they kiss the cook on the way out the door.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
mollymalonemartin | Oct 10, 2019 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
31
Also by
7
Membros
550
Popularidade
#45,355
Avaliação
½ 3.7
Críticas
9
ISBN
36
Línguas
8
Marcado como favorito
2

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