Skip to content
Responsive image
Vendor
Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
Original language
English
Categories

THE HISTORY OF BONES

John Lurie

A Memoir

John Lurie is "a ubiquitous figure in independent and underground film and music culture in the 1980s." (The Washington Post)
This book is a riot to read, not to mention a blast from the past! It is the quintessential depiction of 1980s New York and the downtown arts scene including appearances from all sorts of heavy-hitters; Warhol, Tom Waits, Madonna, David Byrne, Jim Jarmusch (whose movies Down By Law and Stranger Than Paradise Lurie starred in), and especially Jean-Michel Basquiat, Lurie's best friend and an enigmatic artistic prodigy (who spent a year sleeping on Lurie's floor), written by someone who was close to the beating heart of it all: actor, artist, musician, and composer John Lurie. The book is full of grime and frank humorin what feels like Lurie speaking directly to youhe describes the frothy, filthy whirlpool of the East Village and the lively world that existed then of artists and musicians there.

Lurie was the epitome of cool in the 1980s, and this gritty memoir charts his course from his childhood in Massachusetts to becoming part of the beating heart of that time and place in New York. After founding the band, The Lounge Lizards, with his brother in 1978, Lurie quickly became one of the central figures in that world of cutting-edge filmmakers, and cultural rebels.

John Lurie is a musician, painter, actor, director, and producer. In 1996, Lurie's soundtrack for the movie Get Shorty was nominated for a Grammy Award, and his groundbreaking albums have been praised by both critics and fellow musicians. He has recorded twenty-two albums (not including those by his alter ego Marvin Pontiac), acted in nineteen films, composed and performed music for twenty television and film works, exhibited his paintings throughout the world, and produced, directed, and starred in the Fishing with John television series.

Since re-centering his focus on visual art in 2004, Lurie has displayed his work in galleries around the world, including PS1 Contemporary Arts Center in New York, Musee Des Beaux-Arts De Montreal, the Musee d'Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean in Luxembourg, and the Watari Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo, who gave their entire museum to the presentation of Lurie's work. He was also featured on the final episode of the late Anthony Bourdain's Parts Unknown. (Bourdain was a fan of Lurie's and purchased one of his paintings shortly before his death.)

Lurie was the subject of a widely read and controversial 2010 NEW YORKER PROFILE: https://bit.ly/3fAWpUp.

Through Lurie's clear-eyed reminiscence, this piece of history comes to teeming, gritty life. And if you're going to ask about the title, it is meant to be a nonsensical, very "him."
Available products
Book

Published 2021-08-17 by Random House

Comments

Interview: A Little Hello From John Lurie Read more...

No other human's strange struggles and triumphs are like this. I was transfixed reading John's yearning to make sense of it all, slamming his fist through the precious veneer of the early eighties New York art/music scene. Yeeeooooow.

The History of Bones is a fantastic read. ... compulsively entertaining memoir... Read more...

Look behind John Lurie's adventure so far and see how it flows from epiphanies: their arrival, their loss, the very possibility of them. Epiphanies consign an artist to life as a hunter-mystic, in a world where the impeccable and the tawdry are equally sacred - a hell of a place, and it's from here that Lurie's candor throws us epiphanies to take away. This is not a book headed for bookshelves, it's coming to crash on your couch.

He just wanted to make beautiful music. That sounds naive, but John Lurie is and was truly unpretentious. The music he made with the Lounge Lizards and after that in film scores and under a pseudonym Marvin Pontiac is beautiful. It certainly deserves to be re-examined in a new light. Read more...

recent article: "John Lurie: 'I wanted to break into Martha Stewart's house and change the curtains. My lawyer said no'"... Read more...

By turns comic, pissed off, and desolate, his raffish picaresque captures everything... The result is an energetic, raucous reprise of an adventurously offbeat life. Read more...

A passionately innovative musician, a painter of exquisite nuance and teasing wit, and a survivor of a recklessly improvised life of chance, poverty, violence, addiction, betrayals, and debilitating illness, Lurie also proves to be a wry, sly, furious, and vivid storyteller. Read more...