A Poet Half-Devoured
Jim Carroll survives junk, rock and roll, middle age, Most of us are lucky to be born with half a talent, or a quarter of one, and then to
These are the words of a man who poisoned –Jim Carroll, “California Variations” Yet somehow he has survived both his environment and his own efforts at Carroll’s middle age may not be everything he wished for; meet him in person, as I did This notoriety is largely based on The Basketball Diaries, Carroll’s Alternately harrowing and hilarious, the Diaries mix a blase worldliness toward Now The Basketball Diaries is a movie, starring the fast-rising Leonardo While The Basketball Diaries is an earnest and well-intentioned effort, and Faced with a relatively low budget (described as less than $4 million) and a tight Such a gambit might have worked as a self-conscious gesture in the hands of a more Kalvert’s efforts to create a cautionary fable for the MTV generation nonetheless comes Worse yet, the Diaries film pulls what you might call a Less Than Zero The only similar scene in Carroll’s book is immeasurably different in tone, and offers Jim Carroll is assuredly not to blame for the slipshod movie based on his own youth, Instead he has upset our expectations by living and by visibly struggling with both Someone asks him at an interview session if he still plays basketball. “I “How much time has been wasted, waiting on bences / in the greying of light near “I wasn’t like a lot of friends of min–especially those who had just gotten back He pauses for a moment, ignoring another question, reconsidering. “I mean, it’s OK Carroll says he has been off junk for several years, but he speaks of heroin as a “Apparently it’s amazingly strong now,” he says with disinct interest. Despite his ghetto-kid demeanor and his continuing flirtation with rock and roll (he The ravages of Jim Carrol’s life are all too clearly visible, on his body as in his Carroll stops near the door, considering those electrons spinning in the air. He turns When the infamous drunk and former prodigy Hart Crane drowned in the Caribbean in 1932, ©1995 San Francisco Bay Guardian
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