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-Library Journal
"Editor Bill Morgan has assembled a wide range of Orlovsky writings in chronological order accompanied by numerous well-chosen photographs, many not widely seen before, along with frequently inserted editor's notes to support contextual flow between selections...It thus adds up to an autobiography of sorts, at times a painfully honest one, and it presents a heretofore missing subnarrative of the Beat Generation."
-Rain Taxi
"This rich and valuable collection of diary entries, journal notations, letters, poems and dreams gathered from various archives with copious, careful, and helpful editorial commentary by Bill Morgan answers my unasked question (how does it feel to live with America's most famous poet?) and helps to reveal an unexplained and previously unexplored corner of Beat history."
-John Tytell for American Book Review
"Peter Orlovsky was the secret heart of the Beats. He wrote and roamed among them. This book contains unknown fragments of their world-the words of their orphaned angel."
-Patti Smith, Poet, Singer/Songwriter
"'Can anyone talk to me, hold me as I am?' This is a poignant, intimate, and captivating document of the inner life of Peter Orlovsky, life-long mainstay to Allen Ginsberg, and crucial to the Beat annals. 'Sad noble Peter, truly an angel and not my joke boy,' Allen wrote in 1955. Yet Peter was keenly present albeit a shy participant in one of the most exciting periods in radical belletristic cultural and political time. I knew him as poet, singer, fellow-Buddhist Naropa teacher, and friend. I can still hear his yodel as he rode his tractor. May he have his say here, out of the shadows and into our hearts."
-Anne Waldman, Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics, Naropa University
"Peter Orlovsky was one of a kind, and his poetry was one of a kind. It's in-your-face poetry, at once comic and tragic."
-Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Poet