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Books on Kindle published by Tale Teller Club Press

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   Other Books by Tale Teller Club Press Empathy in Algorithms: AI's Role in Inclusive Feminist Activism (The Humanitarian AI Book 1) Sarnia de la Mare Kindle Edition £3.72 The Book of Immersion Strata 21: Love and Loss The Power of Kin (Tale Teller Club) (Japanese Edition) Sarnia de la Mare Kindle Edition £2.48 Artificial Intelligence in Music : Blending Creativity and Technology (The Humanitarian AI Book 2) Sarnia de la Mare Kindle Edition £3.72 Handmade by Sarnia, Eco Winter Warmers: Elderescence Academy: Recycled Fashion Sarnia de la Mare 5.0 out of 5 stars 1 Kindle Edition £4.99 Rat Gang Crew and the Overgrounders (Rat Gang Crew and Friends Book 3) Sarnia de la Mare Kindle Edition £4.72 Tea Cup Shorts: V1 Sarnia de la Mare Kindle Edition £3.93 Remove from view Elderescence: A Manifesto (Elderescence Academy Book 2) Sarnia de la Mare Kindle Edition £7.66 Book of Immersion Strata 1: Renyke Wakes (Purpose) (The Book of Immersion 27) Sarnia de la Mare Kindle Edition £1.46 Boo...

CH 1. Rebel Queens: Women, Punk, and the Sound of Resistance, Chapter One: “New York.” by Sarnia de la Mare

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Welcome to the new series of Books by Tale Teller Club, Concise Books that give you what you need to know on 100s of subjects. CH 1. Rebel Queens: Women, Punk, and the Sound of Resistance, Chapter One: “New York.” by Sarnia de la Mare Chapter One: New York Where the Noise Began—and Where it Ended Up The room was hot, rank with beer and body odour, lights flickering through cigarette smoke. CBGB wasn’t a temple so much as a sewer mouth, coughing up sound. Patti Smith stood on the lip of the stage, lean and electric, her hair a dark storm around a face that refused to smile. She wasn’t pretty, and that was the point. Her voice cracked, sneered, soared. Every syllable spat into the microphone was an act of defiance: against the industry, against gender, against the idea that art should behave itself. This was 1975, and something unnameable was happening in New York’s Bowery district. The Velvet Underground had already cracked the veneer of polite rock; Television, Talking Heads, and Blond...