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"Heroin" and other poems
By Jim Carroll
In 1973, his poetry collection "Living at the Movies" was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. A second diary, "Forced Entries" (1987), captured his experience as a fixture on the downtown Manhattan art scene. Carroll also has recorded numerous albums with the Jim Carroll Band, including "Catholic Boy" (1980), which features the seminal punk song "People Who Died." Carroll's most recent publicaiton is "Void of Course" (1998), a collection of poems. He is currently at work on a novel.
Carroll arrived at Salon.com's office on lower Fifth Avenue in New York, not far from his downtown apartment, on a sunny Friday morning in early April. Tall and thin, dressed in a brown jacket and jeans, exuding a comfortable earnestness, he read a selection of poems first published in the Paris Review.
Visit the Paris Review Web site for information on upcoming issues, how to subscribe and more.
Photo Credit: 1998 Mercury Records/Ray Lego/Cut the Fat
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