




RICHARD CABUT :: LOOKING FOR A KISS :: PAPERBACK FIRST EDITION:: PC-PRESS :: 2023 :: PG. 194 :: ENGLISH LANGUAGE :: DISTRIBUTED IN EUROPE BY RIZOSFERA
****** The new shipments of the RICHARD CABUT’s book will commence on February 15, 2025. If orders include additional items from Rizoshop, the complete shipment with all selected products will also be dispatched from February 15, 2025, onwards.
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‘Looking for a Kiss’ is the post-punk classic novel….. A drug-fuelled beat/punk, love/hate story…… Like a bitter sweet John Coltrane solo crashing into Einstürzende Neubauten….. whilst immersing themselves in drugs, sex, magic, chaos and the post-punk music of the time our protagonists Robert and Marlene struggle to find themselves and their lives in Camden, London, England….. Books like Looking for a Kiss are a flare in the dark.
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‘Totally fabulous and restores my belief in brilliant, subversive subcultures books still being the active source of our imaginative capital. It’s superb in its occupation of alternative realities. An absolute marvel and the writing is just fantastic. Post-cool invites post-punk in the drenched lysergic prism of a novel of addictive transgressions redeemed throughout by the lyrical arc of a prose that elicits lost futures in the defiant present. With Camden as its subcultures locative, and its green canal the novel’s pineal gland, Robert and Marlene alienated and unknowable to each other in altered states witness each other’s blurred emotions with a philosophic acuity that both stings and leaves astute marks on their dystopian histories…… A brilliant, upending book in which ‘Punk was, in effect, a way of stopping your past from becoming your future,’’ Jeremy Reed, author and poet.
‘A masterpiece… collapsing temporal sensations in a manner evocative of the postmodern condition, seeking transcendent meaning within punk, acid, sex and living in squalor in Camden. Blew my mind.’ Adam Lehrer @safetypropaganda
‘Like a bittersweet Coltrane solo crashing into Einstürzende Neubauten. Books like this are a flare in the dark.’ Malcolm Paul, Expat Press
‘A drug-fuelled beat/punk, love/hate story. Like (say) Kerouac, it’s shot through with sadness. Not just the comedown, but the inability to bridge the gulf between the enlightened moment of Beatitude, and the bleak surroundings you exist in the rest of the time.’ Paul Gorman, writer
‘Reminds me more of US post-punk writing… Kathy Acker … Richard Hell… it is raw, cold, desperate, fucked up.’ Michael Gratzke, academic
‘Cool, clever, magical, literary and very, very exciting.’ Gregory Hesse, photographer
CLICK HERE TO READ “Richard Cabut Interview” by Johnson Clarkson
In the early 1980s, young punks, ‘NME’ writer Robert and his confrontational, openly unfaithful girlfriend Marlene drop acid by the Regent’s Canal in Camden in North London. As they set off for home to their flat, their minds initially enhanced and then distorted by the drugs, they find themselves on an increasingly bad trip…. From this premise, 1980’s music journalist Richard Cabut’s masterly debut novel, ‘Looking for a Kiss’, examines broadly the vast changes in London’s landscape over the last forty years, the passing of the original punk movement and the brief positive punk movement of 1982/1983 which Robert in particular is involved with and which was spearheaded by bands such as Southern Death Cult and Sex Gang Children. Focusing also on issues of trust and commitment, it time travels years into the future to find Robert and Marlene long separated but reflecting on their unhappy time together and whether their lives are any better now. ‘Looking for a Kiss’ was originally published in 2020, but has just been reissued in an expanded edition which includes new introductions, and diaries and essays from the 1980s from Cabut (under his original pen name of Richard North) on punk and positive punk. We spoke to Richard Cabut about ‘Looking for a Kiss’ and its forthcoming film adaption.
PB: ‘Looking for a Kiss’ has been described by one critic as an “unromance”. Do you think that is an accurate description?
RC: Yeah, at one level. The book deals with a couple of cultural arcs. One is a cultural arc and one is a more personal arc, and the cultural arc is punk really and the 1970s, and then it comes to the other level of the arc where punk is really over and also the place where these people live, London, is finished. So it is changing. It is not the ruinous playground that it used to be for them. There is no place in the world for these people or so they feel, and the personal arc intertwines with the wider arc, the social arc if you like. They have invested their emotions and feelings not just into punk rock but into each other, but any romance between them is now dead (Laughs) and their idealism both in the personal and the wider sense hasn’t been fulfilled.
PB: Both Robert and Marlene seem trapped by punk. It seems to be doing more to hold them back rather than move them forward .
RC: They have to move forward. The title ‘Looking for a Kiss’ does not really refer to looking for a kiss. They are looking for redemption. They are looking for a way out, a way forward. I think that is really the story. It is an anti coming-of-age story. By that I mean it is anti in that they don’t come of age. They are still looking for a kiss.
(a suivre … link above!)