Slava Mogutin, the notorious Russian dissident-turned-art-star and creator of the critically acclaimed Lost Boys (powerHouse Books, 2006), returns with his second monograph, NYC Go-Go, a tribute to the golden age of New York City nightlife.
The once-glittering club world had all but disappeared by the time Mogutin arrived in America in the mid-1990s. Under Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s controversial "Quality of Life" campaign, downtown clubs paid the ultimate price: owners were branded community pariahs and paid crippling fines for alleged disruptiveness, while others were prosecuted for criminal acts; many legendary night spots were wiped off the map altogether.
In his new book, Mogutin documents the ever-shrinking downtown gay scene, taking us inside remaining joints like the Cock, Boysroom, and Mr. Black. NYC Go-Go is a wild and raunchy journey into the decaying but utterly decadent underworld of hustlers and go-go boys. Some of them are "rough trade"—thugs with criminal pasts, busted for prostitution, drugs, or armed assault—while others are "gay for pay," married with kids and hustling for their families; most are Mogutin’s friends. NYC Go-Go captures the spirit of a scene under fire with Mogutin’s trademark raw, in-your-face style.
SLAVA MOGUTIN is a Siberian-born artist and writer, exiled from Russia for his queer writings and activism at the age of twenty-one. He was granted political asylum in the US with the support of Amnesty International and PEN American Center. He is the author of seven books in Russian and the winner of the Andrei Bely Prize for Poetry (2000). Mogutin’s photography has been exhibited internationally and featured in a wide range of publications including The New York Times, The Village Voice, ArtUS, i-D, Visionaire, L’Uomo Vogue, and Stern. In 2005, together with his partner-collaborator Brian Kenny, he formed SUPERM, a multimedia art team, responsible for site-specific installations and shows in New York, Los Angeles, Moscow, Berlin, Oslo, London, and Leon, Spain. His first monograph, Lost Boys, was published by powerHouse Books in 2006 and became an instant best seller. He is currently based in New York City.
评分
评分
评分
评分
这本书的装帧设计简直是一场视觉盛宴,那种厚重的纸张质感,拿在手里沉甸甸的,仿佛承载着无数秘密等待被揭开。封面那种深邃的靛蓝色调,配上烫金的细密花纹,低调中透着一股禁欲系的高级感,让人在书店的灯光下都忍不住多看几眼。内页的排版也极其考究,字体的选择既有古典的韵味又不失现代的清晰度,行距和边距的拿捏恰到好处,即便是长时间阅读,眼睛也不会感到疲劳。我尤其欣赏作者在章节过渡时所使用的那些留白处理,简约得近乎冷酷,却又在无形中营造出一种强烈的节奏感,仿佛每翻过一页,都在为接下来的冲击做着无声的蓄力。这种对物理形态的极致追求,让这本书不仅仅是一部作品,更像是一件值得收藏的艺术品。每一次抚摸书脊,都能感受到那种匠人精神的温度,这在如今这个追求快速消费的时代,显得尤为珍贵和令人肃然起敬。拿到手的那一刻,我就知道,这本书的作者对细节的执着,已经超越了文字本身,延伸到了物质的每一个角落。
评分从主题探讨的深度来看,这本书无疑是野心勃勃的。它不像那些迎合大众口味的作品那样提供清晰的道德标杆或者简单的善恶二元对立。相反,它像一把手术刀,毫不留情地剖开了现代社会中关于身份认同和技术异化的种种伪装。作者似乎对“真实”这个概念抱持着一种近乎偏执的怀疑态度,书中构建的世界观,让你不断地反思自己所依赖的感知系统是否可靠。更让人不安的是,它并没有停留在哲学思辨层面,而是将这些宏大的概念,巧妙地植入了极其微小、极具代入感的个体经验之中。比如对某一特定光线强度下物体边缘的描述,或者对某种特定气味的回忆,正是这些扎实的细节,使得那些形而上的探讨获得了令人信服的重量。读完之后,那种感觉不是“我明白了什么”,而是“我好像对一切都产生了新的、更深刻的怀疑”。
评分这本书的语言风格,简直像是一场精心编排的、带着浓烈后现代主义色彩的爵士乐即兴演奏。它毫不留情地拆解和重构着我们习以为常的语法结构,句子常常是那种长到令人窒息的、带着无数从句和插入语的“巨兽”,但奇怪的是,你竟然能跟得上它的呼吸节奏。那种对词汇的偏爱,充满了某种晦涩的、几乎是古老的精确性,每一个动词和形容词都被放在了最苛刻的位置上进行审判,没有一个词是用来“凑数”的。这种语言的密度,使得我不得不经常停下来,反复阅读同一段落,不是因为我不懂,而是因为我怕错过作者在那层“华丽辞藻”下面隐藏的另一层更冷峻的批判。它不是用来“听”的,而是需要“看”和“拆解”的,它要求读者投入全部的智力资源去进行一场智力上的角力,而这种挑战本身,就是阅读乐趣的重要组成部分。
评分我得说,这本书的叙事手法简直是太“狡猾”了,它根本就不给你喘息的机会。故事的开篇那种看似漫不经心的日常描摹,其实像一张巨大的、细密的网,每写下一句话,都在不动声色地收紧,等你察觉不对劲时,你已经完全被困在了作者构建的逻辑迷宫里。叙述者采用了大量的第一人称视角切换,但这种切换并非简单的角色转换,而更像是一种意识流的渗透,读者的心绪也跟着那些碎片化的记忆和闪回反复拉扯,一会儿是炙热的阳光,一会儿又是冰冷的钢铁反射,那种时空错位的眩晕感,让人欲罢不能。作者对于情绪的捕捉极其精准,那种潜藏在对话背后的巨大张力,比直接的冲突描写更具杀伤力。你得放慢速度去咀嚼那些看似平常的对话,因为真正的“炸弹”往往就藏在那些“是的”和“也许”之间。这本书更像是对人性深处某种原始恐惧的解剖,它不提供答案,只负责把你推到悬崖边上,让你自己去面对脚下的万丈深渊。
评分这本书的节奏掌控能力,我只能用“大师级”来形容。全书的张力曲线铺排得极其精妙,它懂得什么时候该急刹车,什么时候又该突然加速到令人眩晕的地步。在某些看似平淡的场景中,作者会埋下无数伏笔,那些细节的伏笔可能跨越了数百页才被激活,等到真相大白的那一刻,回溯整个阅读过程,你会震惊于作者布局的宏大和缜密。那种感觉就像是看一场铺陈了多年的棋局,在你以为胜负已定时,对手突然走出一步“看似无解”的棋,然后所有的棋子都活了过来。相比于那些情节推进直线式的作品,这本书更像是螺旋上升,每一次循环都比上一次更加深入和黑暗。它没有给出一个轻松的结局,甚至连“解决”的概念都不存在,留给读者的,是一片需要自行重建的、破碎的叙事废墟,这份开放性和挑战性,是它最引人入胜的地方。
评分gay
评分gay
评分gay
评分gay
评分gay
本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 qciss.net All Rights Reserved. 小哈图书下载中心 版权所有