
For many, Just Kids was something of a gateway book – the moment Patti Smith shifted from being a music icon to a literary one. Her writing has the same mix of grit and grace that defines her songs, and across memoir, fiction, and poetry, Smith has built a body of work that explores art, loss, memory, and the beauty of everyday life.
If you’ve ever wanted to understand how Smith sees the world – or simply to sit inside her mind for a while – these are the books to start with. Our favourite books from Patti Smith's repertoire, below.
Bread of Angels (2025)
The latest addition to Smith's canon. Bread of Angels charts Smith's teenage years, giving intimate insight into her first dalliances with creativity, including how Arthur Rimbaud and Bob Dylan emerged as her creative role models, and how she began writing poetry and lyrics.
Just Kids (2010)
Smith’s breakthrough memoir traces her early years in New York City and her relationship with photographer Robert Mapplethorpe. Together, they navigate poverty, ambition, and the palpable creative energy of the late 1960s and early ’70s art scene. It’s both a coming-of-age story and a portrait of a friendship that shaped two extraordinary lives.
M Train (2015)
A reflective follow-up to Just Kids, M Train is neither pure memoir nor fiction. It follows Smith through the rhythms of her life — mornings spent in a Greenwich Village café, journeys to Mexico, Berlin, and Iceland, and moments of mourning for her late husband, Fred “ Sonic ” Smith. As she writes about coffee, notebooks, television detectives, and the act of writing itself, Smith turns the ordinary into something sacred.
Year of the Monkey (2019)
Blurring memoir and surrealism, Year of the Monkey follows Smith as she travels across America in the year she turned 70. The book begins on the California coast, where she stays in a deserted motel called the Dream Inn, and unfolds across Santa Cruz, Arizona, and New York. Written against the backdrop of political upheaval and the illness of close friends, it blends diary, hallucination, and reportage into a single, surreal narrative.
Woolgathering (1992 / 2012 edition)
In this collection of poetry, Smith looks back on her childhood in rural New Jersey. The pieces are short, lyrical, and dreamlike, touching on memory, wonder, and the first stirrings of creativity. Though the book was first published in 1992, to mark its 20th anniversary, she published a re-edition featuring additional material in 2012.
The Coral Sea (1996)
Written in the wake of Robert Mapplethorpe’s death, The Coral Sea is Smith’s tribute to her closest friend. Told through a series of prose poems, it imagines Mapplethorpe as a sailor on a final voyage toward an unknown horizon. It’s a work of mourning and transformation, filled with incredibly evocative imagery.
Collected Lyrics, 1970–2015
For those who came to Smith through her music, this volume gathers more than four decades of her lyrics – from Horses to Banga. On the page, her songs reveal their literary weight. It’s a physical reminder of the true artistic genius of Patti Smith.
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