got this from
britpopart Jim Carroll, 60, a poet-turned-punk rocker whose book "The Basketball Diaries" chronicled his descent from elite high school basketball star to Times Square drug addict, thief and prostitute, died Sept. 11 at his home in Manhattan after a heart attack.
Mr. Carroll's best-known work was an autobiographical account of his years from 12 to 15 when he received a basketball scholarship to Trinity, an elite Manhattan high school, and began abusing cocaine and other drugs. The journal, excerpted in the Paris Review, became highly popular on college campuses and was published as a book in 1978. A 1995 movie version starred Leonardo DiCaprio as Mr. Carroll.
The book's bleak description of adolescent life in a heartless city rang true for many. It began with wary joy: "Today was my first Biddy League game and my first day in any organized basketball league. I'm enthused about life due to this exciting event. The Biddy League is a league for anyone 12 yrs. old or under. I'm actually 13 but my coach Lefty gave me a fake birth certificate."
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"The Basketball Diaries" ends with the author at an abyss: "Totally zonked, and all the dope scraped or sniffed clean from the tiny cellophane bags. Four days of temporary death gone by, no more bread. . . . Nice June day out today, lots of people probably graduating. I can see the Cloisters with its million in medieval art out the bedroom window. I got to go in and puke. I just want to be pure."
Mr. Carroll was hailed as one of the best poets of his generation, and by his late teens, he had befriended Bob Dylan, artist Andy Warhol, photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, and poet and rock singer Patti Smith.
Beat poet Jack Kerouac, upon reading Mr. Carroll's diaries as a manuscript, said, "At 13 years of age, Jim Carroll writes better prose than 89 percent of the novelists working today."
James Dennis Carroll, the son and grandson of bartenders, was born in New York on Aug. 1, 1949, and began writing as a boy. His first published poetry was "Organic Trains" (1967), followed by "4 Ups and 1 Down" (1970) and "Living at the Movies" (1973).
In a successful attempt to escape his drug habit, he moved cross-country to Bolinas, Calif., an almost-hidden coastal enclave north of San Francisco. Smith, whom he had met at a poetry reading and who gave him a place to live in New York, encouraged him to perform spoken-word pieces with her band, and he enjoyed it so much that he formed his own band.
Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones got him a record deal with Atlantic, and his first release, "Catholic Boy," met with critical acclaim in 1980, although reviewers said he could hardly carry a tune.
sorry this one was late. i'm still upset over Patrick Swayze. ok, so who else thinks he'll come back as a ghost?