The focus, however, is on the people in this movement, and, to a lesser extent, the music they created. In this book, you can learn how glitter rock came to be, how the Velvet Underground's wardrobe shocked bohemian New York, how the Sex Pistols (and other groups) used the swastika to shock the bourgeoisie. Some printings have three photo sections, so you can see what these fashions looked like instead of just reading about them. Fashion is mentioned and, at some points, even discussed in depth. If you're looking for a history of punk fashion, this is not the right book. The book focuses on the musical and social aspects of punk, although it does delve into other areas, such as fashion, sex, the lives of groupies, junkies and people like Anya Phillips, an impresario, model, dominatrix and one of the book's most fascinating characters. Like No Wave, a contemporaneous art and music scene, punk was more influential than profitable. Tales of drug use, drug abuse, violent altercations, strange rooms and theatrics (on and off the stage) make this absorbing literature, especially when written in the words of people who lived through it. The book is an "uncensored oral history," and because few of its chief players are famous, we can take that appellation at face value. Please Kill Me chronicles punk rock from its origins in late 1960s New York to the its first wave's conclusion in 1980. Please Kill Me An Uncensored Oral History of Punk by Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain
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