<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>The author of the acclaimed <em>City Poet</em> returns with a searing memoir of life in 1980s New York City--a colorful and atmospheric tale of wild bohemians, glamorous celebrity, and complicated passions--with cameo appearances by Madonna, Robert Mapplethorpe, William Burroughs, and a host of others legendary artists.</p><p>Brad Gooch arrived in New York in the late 1970s, yearning for artistic and personal freedom. <em>Smash Cut</em> is his bold and intimate memoir of this exhilarating time and place. At its center is his love affair with film director Howard Brookner, pieced together from fragments of memory and fueled by a panoply of emotions, from blazing ecstasy to bleakest despair.</p><p>As both men try to reconcile love and fidelity with the irresistible desire to enjoy the freedom of the age, they live together and apart. Gooch works briefly as a model in Milan, then returns to the city and discovers his vocation as an artist. Brookner falls ill with a mysterious virus that soon has a terrifying name: AIDS. And the story, and life in the city, is suddenly overshadowed by this new demon plague that will ravage a generation and transform the creative world. Gooch charts the progress of Brookner through his illness, and writes unforgettably about endings: of a great talent, a passionate love affair, and an incandescent era.</p><p>Beautifully written, full of rich detail and poignant reflection, recalling a time and a place and group of friends with affection and clarity, <em>Smash Cut</em> is an extraordinary memoir and an exquisite account of an epoch.</p><p>Illustrated with 30 black-and-white photographs.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br><p>"A gorgeous memoir . . . a potent mix of love, art, and death."--<em>Vanity Fair</em></p><p>Brad Gooch arrived in New York in the 1970s, eager for artistic and personal freedom. <em>Smash Cut</em> is his bold and intimate memoir of this exhilarating time and place, complete with its cast of wild bohemians, celebrities, and budding artists, such as Robert Mapplethorpe, William Burroughs, and Madonna. At its center is his love affair with film director Howard Brookner, re-created from fragments of memory and a crosshatch of conflicting emotions, from innocent romance to bleak despair.</p><p>Gooch and Brookner's intense relationship is challenged by sex and drugs, and by a culture of extreme experimentation. As both men try to reconcile love and fidelity with the irresistible desire to sample the legendary abandon of the era, they live together and apart. Gooch works briefly as a model in Milan, then returns to New York and discovers his vocation as a writer.</p><p>Brookner falls ill with a mysterious virus that soon has a terrifying name: AIDS. And the story, along with life in the city, is suddenly overshadowed by this new plague that will ravage a generation and transform the creative world. Gooch charts the progress of Brookner through his illness, and writes unforgettably about endings: of a great talent, a passionate love affair, and an incandescent era.</p><p>"Brave and powerful."--A. M. Homes, author of <em>May We Be Forgiven</em></p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"<i>Smash Cut</i> is an eloquent, deeply felt exploration of love and ambition in dangerous times. . . <i>Smash Cut</i> [is] a moving, memorable and important book."--<em>Miami Herald</em><br><br>"<i>Smash Cut</i> is a love story, an elegy, an intimate history written with enormous grace by a novelist and poet, who is also a master biographer. "--Honor Moore, author of <i>The Bishop's Daughter</i><br><br>"A gorgeous memoir...a potent mix of love, art, and death."--<i>Vanity Fair</i><br><br>"A powerful, poignant and especially frank memoir. . . Rife with humor, glamour, audacity and tragedy, <i>Smash Cut</i> is a witty, whimsical portrait of art and artists from an unforgettable time period."--<i>Edge Media</i><br><br>"Acclaimed literary biographer Brad Gooch turns to the contours of his own life, particularly his romance with film director Howard Brookner, in this brave and intimate memoir... The elegiac book traces complex terrains of sex and drugs, ambition and love, and art and mortality with tender honesty."--<i>GOOP</i><br><br>"Brad Gooch's story is harrowingly honest written with love and in grief, a deftly articulated insightful history that is at once personal and deeply resonant. Brave and powerful--I couldn't put it down."--A.M. Homes, author of <i>May We Be Forgiven</i><br><br>"Engrossing, intimate. . . . This candid memoir lovingly evokes a life, and a world, lost."--<i>Kirkus Reviews</i><br><br>"Far more than a memoir, <i>Smash Cut</i> is a bold and tender anatomy of love in an age of ambition, art, and changing light."--Brenda Wineapple<br><br>"Gooch brings the city to life with all its promise and possibility. A personal, intimate look at our country's creative history that will also keep you up all night and make you see the city in a new way."--Susan Cheever<br><br>"Gooch excels when reporting on the cruelty wrought by H.I.V. that would eventually take Brookner's life-and on the complexity of a relationship that defied category."--<i>New York Times Book Review</i><br><br>"Gooch has documented his life... with unselfconscious ease that makes his memoir a literary achievement more than a simple biography... It's short but impactful, like a poem you didn't realize you'd been waiting your whole life to read and stumbled across by chance."--<i>Boy Culture</i><br><br>"Gooch is a cool witness to the era's excess and his own conflicting behavior; his quiet honesty is bold. <i>Smash Cut</i> is a love story and an elegy. It's heady, sexy, heartbreaking, and most notably, even in the face of death, written not from anger, but love."--Bay Area Reporter<br><br>"In his memoir <i>Smash Cut</i>, Gooch traces the life of '70s and '80s New York with the same fashionable tongue of a literary connoisseur, approaching the details of his life with humour and poignancy."--<i>Pop Matters</i><br><br>"In Gooch's visceral, gut-punching narrative, the arrival of AIDS turns the city into a cemetery. . . . This is a memoir that needs to be read by those who remember and those who never knew."--<i>Interview Magazine</i><br><br>"It is both unparalleled in its intimacy, focusing on his romance with the filmmaker Howard Brookner, and its universality, as a testament to the havoc wreaked by the AIDS pandemic, something he witnessed firsthand in Brookner's decline and eventual death in 1989."--<i>Kirkus</i><br><br>"Like everyone who ever met Brad, I fell instantly in love. If YOU'VE not met him, reading this book will be the next best thing."--Andrew Tobias, author of <i>The Best Little Boy in the World</i><br><br>"So glamorous, so sexy, and so devastating, this love story will be the gay picture of the 70s/80s. That it took place between two beautiful, talented young men only makes it the more romantic and poignant."--Edmund White, author of CITY BOY<br><br>"That Gooch is a splendid writer will not be left in doubt for anyone who delves into his new memoir. . . . Literary memoirs abound; this one excels in beautiful honesty."--<i>Booklist</i> (starred review)<br><br>"The fact that a writer of Brad Gooch's significance has been witness to remarkable events and people, and has written about them, is a genuine gift to the world. <i>Smash Cut</i> is a beautiful and important book."--Michael Cunningham, Pulitzer Prize winning author<br>
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