EBOOK

About
Bill Berkson was a poet, art critic, and joyful participant in the best of postwar and bohemian American culture. Since When gathers the ephemera of a life well-lived, a collage of boldface names, parties, exhibitions, and literary history from a man who could write "of [Truman Capote's Black and White] ball, which I attended as my mother's escort, I have little recollection" and reminisce about imagining himself as a character from Tolstoy while tripping on acid at Woodstock. Gentle, witty, and eternally generous, this is Bill, and a particular moment in American history, at its best.
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Reviews
"Imagine an ideal friend, someone of good character, honorable, congenial, smart, well-read, judicious, articulate, self-aware, open-minded, and socially graceful, a gifted writer at the center of New York's and the Bay Area's artistic communities for sixty years. That ideal friend is Bill Berkson, and in this marvelous book he tells the true and fascinating story of his life and times."
Ron Padgett
"Since When captures the throbbing zeitgeist of a NYC/California experimental poetry/art rhizome and brims with dazzling encounters and glamorous portraiture of some of the best, most talented minds, including the author's own parents and their coterie. Enthralling conversation, quotation, and astute commentary: Judy Garland! Ezra Pound! Greta Garbo! Frank O'Hara! Joan Mitchell! Amiri Baraka! Poet
Anne Waldman
"It's tough to write a blurb about one of the most effortlessly cool and genuinely wise people you've ever met, especially when they already said it best with their high school yearbook quote: 'Plato or comic books, I'm versatile.' That was Bill, all the way. As his student, the main theme was, 'Be kind, be clear, and a little humor goes a long way,' a message that impacted our class deeply and co
Devendra Banhart