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Culture & Religion

An Interview with Patti Smith

Patti Smith became a rock star by accident—it made her an icon. She wrote a book—it won a major award. Now, with an album on the way and a U.K. tour, she’s as driven as ever.
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When, in the late 60s and early 70s, Patti Smith was working in bookstores in New York, often having to choose between art supplies and lunch, she stacked National Book Award-winning books on shelves, wrapped them up for customers, sold them. And as she did so, she told a rapt audience last November, choking up with tears, “I dreamed of having a book of my own, of writing one that I could put on a shelf”; she hardly dreamed of having a National Book award of her own as well. Robert Mapplethorpe was the person who refused to “listen to me falter, question myself, question my abilities.”

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