![]() ![]() ![]() I thought if I had to be honest about her, I should also be honest about myself. I was on Valium or Xanax all the time, and my therapist said I should write about what happened, so I did. They amputated her leg, and she didn't survive. She was admitted to the hospital, and I couldn't find her. She'd just flown home and told me her leg hurt. I was in the middle of doing my porn book, The Other Hollywood: The Uncensored Oral History of the Porn Industry, and a TV show at the same time, so I'd fly her in to wherever I was. McNeil: It's about my five-month affair with the love of my life, and it's also about Punk magazine. I asked him about both before his trip to Madison. He'll also share selections from a new memoir, Girl With the Most Cake. McNeil will read from it at Mickey's Tavern this Wednesday, Oct. It turns respectable rock fans into music-history junkies. ![]() It's read and reread, studied and quoted. It meant "drunk, obnoxious, smart but not pretentious, absurd, funny, ironic, and things that appealed to the darker side," he and Gillian McCain explain in their 1996 book Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk.įor many punks, Please Kill Me is a bible of sorts. ![]() The name symbolized what they loved about their favorite musicians. He started a magazine called Punk with a couple of friends. He lived in 1970s New York, otherwise known as hell. Punk groupie Sable Starr teases Legs McNeil. ![]()
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