Reviews

A Book of Days by Patti Smith

kb_208's review against another edition

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4.0

A really nice book of photos taken by Patti Smith during the lock down time of the pandemic. Each photo is accompanied by a short writing telling about the photo and the memories that each one has in her life.
I actually saw Patti Smith on her book/music tour this year. She gave everyone in the audience a copy of the book. Pretty awesome. During the show she told stories about the pictures in her book and then would play a few acoustic songs with her bassist. It was a really nice show. The book is very chill and even inspiring at times. Helping you to really look inward at what memories are truly important in your own life.

lilycooper's review against another edition

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5.0

i have yet to find a book that’s not good by patti smith

lenawadera's review against another edition

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Kocham Patti Smith, ale ta pozycja nadaje się raczej tylko do przejrzenia jako ot, ulotną ciekawostkę.

klaraxck's review against another edition

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inspiring reflective fast-paced

5.0

dar_muzz's review against another edition

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5.0

I started reading Book of Days on January 1 and it became my companion for the year. On the first of each month, I read a month's worth of entries, and once a week, I re-read them, so I've actually read the book 4 times. Patti (I feel like we're on a first-name basis now) provides one of her photos for each day of the year, accompanied by a couple of descriptive lines - carried over from her Instagram page. If you know Patti, much of her life and art revolve around remembrance and commemoration. Her lyrics and other writings are often triggered by thinking of someone's birthday or the anniversary of their death or a visit to their grave. She also collects keepsakes to feel closer to people she's known and/or admired: Sam Shepard's pocketknife, an Alexander McQueen T-shirt from Michael Stipe, Margot Fonteyn's slippers, a letter written by Emily Dickinson, Rimbaud's house! She also photographs the personal belongings of artists and writers in museums and galleries. All this interspersed with some pics of her family and her elderly cat.

It was fascinating to see into Patti's mind and history in this way, to see her influences and all the people, things and memories she surrounds herself with. I am not sure how I will get through 2024 without another such book, but the best part is, it makes me want to create my own page-or-post-a-day about my own idiosyncratic loves.

hillsax's review against another edition

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2.0

Patti, I love you, but how much did Meta pay you for this?

brennaweeks's review against another edition

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fast-paced

1.0

Perhaps after years, I am still chasing the ghost of “Just Kids” what felt like a true love story that everyone can relate to. 


Since then, I tried with “M Train” to just return it to the library with a multitude of unread pages. And now “Book of Days” truly just instagram content in physical form. 

As a photographer and as someone who writes (I write, I am not a writer) I was hoping for something more poetic and more photos of which she had actually taken. But this felt as if she was trying too hard in sounding profound in her daily meditations. 

Perhaps I have simply outgrown Patti Smith? 

kb_208's review against another edition

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4.0

A really nice book of photos taken by Patti Smith during the lock down time of the pandemic. Each photo is accompanied by a short writing telling about the photo and the memories that each one has in her life.
I actually saw Patti Smith on her book/music tour this year. She gave everyone in the audience a copy of the book. Pretty awesome. During the show she told stories about the pictures in her book and then would play a few acoustic songs with her bassist. It was a really nice show. The book is very chill and even inspiring at times. Helping you to really look inward at what memories are truly important in your own life.

egilmore's review against another edition

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2.0

I don’t know.

I get this is Instagram content (simplistic by default), but even so, this book felt hollow. I always cringe at Smith’s pretentiousness when it comes to the French and her absolute deification of Rimbaud. I guess one should respect her unabashed fangirling but her reverence - for many European intellectuals, not just Rimbaud - feels naive, didactic, and unexamined. Really it just feels dated. I did learn some new names from the references that I want to read, and some of the photos were nice.

Is it presumptuous to say I think I’ve outgrown Patti Smith? By that I mean, I’d literally rather read YA fantasy than this stuff, for whatever that’s worth. More aptly, if I’m going to read great writers, I’d rather read them than read about them. I’d rather read Bruno Schulz than read Smith mention him for her own intellectual gratification.

Just Kids moved me when I was young. I think that’s enough for me.

jaygabler's review against another edition

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reflective slow-paced
Surprisingly twee.