2021 American Book Award Winner
The sexiest and most graphic history of a love life I've ever read.
–Laurie Anderson, The New York Times Essential, joyous reading . . . Giorno's influence on poetry, art, and performance culture continues to be great. Now, thanks to his diligence in documenting so many personal details – and floridly annotating so many behind-the-scenes affairs – he has a chance to be reconsidered and credited with being one of the great gay sex-positive pioneers of the late 20th century. –Jerry Portwood,
Rolling Stone Long before Patti Smith came to New York City to seek the artist's life, there was Giorno. He's lesser known these days (that's what happens to poets who don't put music to their words), but his hypnotic memoir, 25 years in the making and completed a week before he died, at 82, last year, should introduce him to a new and wider audience. Not just for his influence on poetry and New York's downtown art scene from the 1950s into the 21st century, but also because his artistic life was nothing short of Zelig-esque from the get-go. –Michael Hainey,
The New York Times Book Review The creativity and debauchery of gay artists and writers blooms in this exuberant memoir of avant-garde New York from the 1950s through the 1990s . . . An engrossing, passionate ode to a revolution in art and sensuality.
–Publishers Weekly (starred review) The ultimate scenester of midcentury Manhattan, lover to a who's who of gay artists and writers, tells all in a posthumous memoir . . . Upbeat, funny, unsparing, and way over the top . . . probably a lot like the man himself.
–Kirkus Reviews Great Demon Kings is an indispensably intimate account of the queer lives of Warhol, Rauschenberg, Johns and Burroughs. Even more significantly, Giorno's memoir is haunted by the knowledge that great art requires a betrayal of the romantic vision of love, equality and the community of strangers.
–Michael Millner, The Spectator Great Demon Kings is unlike anything you have ever read or imagined. John Giorno built a life that was shocking, joyous, and raw. His lifelong search for inspiration and love created one of the greatest voices of poetry and beauty, forgiveness and truth.
–Michael Stipe If you want to know every scandalous detail about everyone who was anyone in the brilliant creative whirlwind that was 1960s and '70s downtown Manhattan (and believe me, you do) you must read this memoir."
–Edmund White Carrying on a wisdom tradition in American letters–striking, most recently, in the works of Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs–John Giorno is a cosmic treasure. His
Great Demon Kings is valiant, hysterical, unpretentious, sexy, gossipy, wise, and true.
–Brad Gooch Giorno–openly gay at a time when many remained closeted–had relationships with titans of the art world, like Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, and Jasper Johns. But he was also a legend in his own right, and Giorno's sensual, visceral account of his own life reveals much about his own work. –Adam Rathe and Liz Cantrell,
Town and Country "John told jokes that he laughed at. His poetry had no rules but it respected the discipline that sound requires. I knew he practiced Nyingma meditation and loved lots of people, and he once told me he could fly across oceans and mountains without losing the mind he so cherished, the one without boundaries where wisdom and humor emerged as one. I wish he had been beside me on the airplane.
–Fanny Howe