From an early age, Richard Hell dreamed of running away. He arrived
penniless in New York City at seventeen; ten years later he was a
pivotal voice of the age of punk, cofounding such seminal bands as
Television, The Heartbreakers, and Richard Hell and the Voidoids--whose
song "Blank Generation" remains the defining anthem of the era, an era
that would forever alter popular culture in all its forms. How this
legendary downtown artist went from a bucolic childhood in the idyllic
Kentucky foothills to igniting a movement that would take over New York
and London's restless youth culture--cementing CBGB as the ground zero
of punk and spawning the careers of not only Hell himself, but a cohort
of friends such as Tom Verlaine, Patti Smith, the Ramones, and Debby
Harry--is a mesmerizing chronicle of self-invention, and of Hell's
yearning for redemption through poetry, music, and art. An acutely
rendered, unforgettable coming-of-age story, I Dreamed I Was a Very
Clean Tramp evokes with feeling, lyricism, and piercing intelligence
both the world that shaped him and the world he shaped.