In 1995, journalist Frank Owen began researching a story on "Special K," a new designer drug that fueled the after-midnight club scene. He went to buy and sample the drug at the internationally-notorious Limelight, a decrepit church converted into a Manhattan disco, where pulse-pounding music, gender-bending dancers, and uninhibited sideshows attracted long lines of hopeful onlookers. Clubland is the story of Owen's six year journey behind the velvet ropes, into the cavernous clubs where any transformation was possible, every extreme permissible--even murder. At first, Owen found an unexpected common ground between very different people: stockbrokers danced with transvestites, pacifier-sucking "club kids" with celebrities, thick-necked jocks with misfits. But as money flowed into the clubs, the music darkened, the drugs intensified, and the carnival spiraled out of control. Four men defined the scene, all of them outsiders, who saw in clubland the chance to escape their pasts and reinvent themselves by making their own rules. Peter Gatien rose from a small Canadian milltown to become the most powerful club operator in America; Michael Alig, a gay misfit from the midwest, escaped to Manhattan where he won a legion of fashion-and-drug enamored followers; Lord Michael Caruso left Staten Island's bars for the rave parties of England, returning as clubland's leading drug dealer and techno music pioneer; and Chris Paciello began as a brutal Bensonhurst gang member, then recast himself as the glamorous prince of Miami Beach, partying with Madonna and Jennifer Lopez at the exclusive nightspots he created. Each of them had secrets that led them over the edge, and when when clubland fell, it left behind tragic human consequences: the disillusioned, the strung out, and the dead. A tour de force of investigative and participatory journalism, Clubland offers a dramatic exposé of a world built on illusion, where morality is ambiguous, identity changeable, and money the root of both ecstasy and evil.
The author reveals the New York Club scene at its worst as he relates his involvement with Michael Alig, a Midwest nerd who became a leading club promoter and eventually found trouble after killing a drug dealer.
Isabella, rule Scandal New 2004), Benson,. The. Witold 96. “A Phase of Humbug,” Vanity Fair, December 3, 1881, 314. ... John Tosh, A Man's Place: Masculinity and the MiddleClass Home in J. Victorian England (New Haven: Yale University ...
This book is designed to accommodate historians of Britain and its empire who are unfamiliar with library history, library historians who are unfamiliar with British history, and book historians who are unfamiliar with both topics.
Thackeray's Skeptical Narrative and the 'Perilous Trade' of Authorship. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2002. Fitzroy, Sir Almeric. History of the Travellers' Club. london: George Allen and Unwin, 1927. Flanders, Judith.
'Owen writes fast and tough, like a cop flick voice-over - if anything, Clubland Confidential is Robin Moore's The French Connection remixed for the chemical generation ' The Guardian Clubland Confidential is the true story of the rise and ...
St James’s clubs, coffee houses and institutions have been shaped by enterprise, political conflict, and Britain’s emerging role as an Imperial power. This is the historic heart of London’s Clubland.
This book is a must-read trip into the dark side of the dance decade, a roller-coaster ride of pills and blood-spilling thrills, where agony and ecstasy co-exist in a blurred neon blaze.
'A new play from the award-winning playwright, published to coincide with its premiere at the Royal Court on 15 June 2001. Although Ben is married to Denise he''s still on...
"This evocative study brings us back to the world of Buchan, 'Sapper' and Dornford Yates: the world of the British Empire, in which leisured London clubmen waged a peacetime Great...
Cook was the ultimate clubber - a spoilt rich kid gone bad. After an initiation into the seedy criminal underworld of the south coast, she headed to London where she...