The pen scratches across the page rebel hump rebel hump rebel hump*. What do these words mean, asks the pen. I don’t know, replies the wrist. These are the words forming and the writer, stationed at Dolina Charlotty, in a valley in northern Poland, will decide later. Charlotty, a name evoking the porcelain face of a doll, left in the grass by a child so that she might go off to pick wild berries. Not for very long, but long enough to be forgotten, and through the passing of time the abandoned doll becomes Charlotty in the rain, Charlotty in the snow, Charlotty pulled apart by a playful dog. Her porcelain head swathed in the shadows of beech trees growing higher through seasons of snow, of red then dead leaves. Seasons of sun fade the pink of her cheeks yet fail to subdue the impassive intensity of her marble eyes.
I never really got into Patti Smith. Back in the mid 1970’s, when my friends were into the Sex Pistols, I was more likely to be listening to Sam Cooke. So despite a strong memory of seeing Horses, Patti Smith’s breakout debut album, amongst the share house collection, I couldn’t really bring her music strongly to mind. It wasn’t part of my personal soundtrack, the ’70’s mixtape of my young adult years.
Therefore, my interest in Bread of Angels was limited, and when a friend gave it to me – ‘Borrow this, you’ll like it’ – I thought they were wrong. Reader, I was wrong. I loved this memoir. From the first paragraph (above), it’s intriguing and enthralling. I found myself transported to a late 1940’s American childhood that was nevertheless almost Dickensian in its poverty and hardship. But this is no misery memoir, it’s more like her very own ‘Song of Innocence and Experience’, as she renders those early years magical, rich and very strange as filtered through her wildly poetic sensibility.
The middle section of the book, which bounces through her early career, were less fascinating for me; I’ve read that these years are dealt with more fully in her other memoirs. Readers may or may not admire her refusal to compromise, to become a product instead of an artist but I was cheering her on. She left her band, her career, at its height to follow her heart. Her account of marriage to Fred ‘Sonic’ Smith, the eccentric home they made together on the shores of a lake in Michigan, the life they shared, the creativity they encouraged in each other, was made more moving by his early death. Her progress through inconsolable grief into a later blooming creative phase seems magnificent. Art, love, life. Bravo Patti.
*Rebel hump? Misfit child that she was, Patti Smith imagined that she had ‘a miniature Quasimodo trapped inside an awkward child’s body’ – but she turned the disability or disfigurement – the hump of the hunchback – into a kind of secret strength.











