A YEAR ON EARTH WITH MR. HELL
I found the book so engrossing; I really did read it in one sitting. That’s kind of unheard of from me. It all takes place in a beautiful bubble of privilege, and thank god. It’s glorious to be allowed to enter into it because fuck the rest of our rotten, barren world in this moment.
—BRET EASTON ELLIS
Available on Apple Books
FASHIONBEAST EDITIONS ANNOUNCES THE TRADE EDITION OF
A YEAR ON EARTH WITH MR. HELL
BY YOUNG KIM
DISTRIBUTED BY INGRAM
Available At All Good Bookstores
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Distribution: omniinfo@wisemusic.com
General: Fashionbeasteditions@icloud.com
A Year on Earth With Mr. Hell is the critically acclaimed début memoir by Young Kim. The book explores a liberated woman’s erotic experience in a clandestine affair without the clichéd political and cultural stereotypes of modern gender roles. It has garnered accolades from none other than Bret Easton Ellis, Greil Marcus, Matthew D’Ancona, Michael Bracewell and Helen Rumbelow of The Times.
Published originally as a limited edition of 2000 numbered copies in 2020, this trade edition published by Fashionbeast Editions will be distributed by Omnibus Press starting Fall 2022 in Europe and Spring 2023 elsewhere.
This book is a completely truthful and explicit account about the first ten months of a romantic affair Kim conducted with legendary punk rocker and writer, Richard Hell, starting in the winter of 2016. It is unique in that while it is a diary, in its cinematic sweep, it reads like a novel. Because it was written as the unpredictable affair unfolded, there was always great uncertainty to the realization of this “daybook-cum-docudrama.”
Known for his own erotic writing, Hell instigated the book inadvertently by asking Kim to write something sexually provocative about their first night together. What resulted was an erotic relationship fueled not only by carnal chemistry but also literary synergy. Unusually, in this instance, Hell, a man, a generation older than Kim, acted as her muse; equally unusual is for a woman to write so explicitly and honestly about sex.
Set in a Warholian swirl in the worlds of art, music, and fashion, spanning continents, the narrative is as much about Kim’s processing her grief for Malcolm McLaren (most famous for his role as the conceptualizer, art director, and manager of the Sex Pistols, as well as designing the punk style with his then-partner Vivienne Westwood), her romantic and business partner for the last 12 years of his life until his untimely death in 2010.
The design of the book, by Studio Marie Lusa, is an homage to Olympia Press, the notorious Parisian publisher of erotic and banned books like Lolita, The Story of O, Naked Lunch and Alexander Trocchi’s Helen and Desire, which was the inspiration behind one of McLaren’s iconic punk designs for SEX: the “I Groaned With Pain” T-shirt.
This second edition has been printed to the highest standards (gold embossing, sewn binding, good-quality paper) by Normandie Roto Impression which today prints the prestigious Pléïade Editions in an area in France historically known for printing some of literature’s most legendary books including Baudelaire’s Les Fleurs du Mal.
Though this means that the book is slightly more expensive (the price of a pint of beer) than a typical paperback book, Kim believes this is more than justified for two reasons she feels passionately about: the reader can derive pleasure from the book’s quality and beauty; and it will last and can be treasured, instead of being disposed of and adding more garbage to the world.
PRAISE FOR A YEAR ON EARTH WITH MR. HELL
I found the book so engrossing; I really did read it in one sitting. That’s kind of unheard of from me. It all takes place in a beautiful bubble of privilege, and thank god. It’s glorious to be allowed to enter into it because fuck the rest of our rotten, barren world in this moment.
— Bret Easton Ellis
A Year On Earth With Mr. Hell is a forensic dissection of the author’s intense sexual relationship with a charismatic, frustrating, talented man, and you won’t have read anything quite like it. It’s breathtakingly frank, clear-eyed and gripping. We should all be grateful that Young Kim is able to write about the risks and delights of desire without fear or shame – and in cool prose that avoids the color purple and all shades of grey.
—Nick Hornby
Sex, fashion, celebrities, travel—in the midst of all this swirling glamour and erotic experimentation is the attentive eye of a discerning young woman.
—Edmund White
The most graphically effective sex writing I've read in a long time. The same material as fiction wouldn't have such an immediate and even threatening effect: when someone is making something up, that gives the reader an out, and this doesn't.
— Greil Marcus
A fabulous escapist fantasy involving two cool people in amazing clothes having a fine time taking them off in glamorous hotel rooms.
—Helen Rumbelow, The Times
The spirit of Anais Nin and Georges Bataille is reborn in this wonderful book. Young Kim has written something that is much more than a memoir—a truly modern work of art.
—Matthew D’Ancona
Taken as a whole the book left me thinking more profoundly about desire, humanity and loss, than anything I’d read in a long time.
I like the way she has insisted on her visibility and her voice being heard, while contributing something truly exciting and thought provoking both to the history of punk— and the future of sex writing.
—Sarah Bailey, Vogue Greece
I was so engrossed. I couldn’t put it down… I read it in three or four days. I loved it… it’s an interesting book because it’s so personal and casual, like I’m having a conversation with you [author]…
—Liya Kebede, Liyabrairie
Written by an Asian American woman about her intimate relationships with two iconic white male founders of the punk movement of the 1970s, Young Kim’s sexual memoir is in part a comedy of manners, in part a love story and despite itself a study of modern morality. Referring to herself in the text as “more predator than prey” Kim throws a spanner in the works of modish feminism, the authorship of porn, racial assumption, sexual politics and the threadbare myth of the rock n roll Priapus.
—Michael Bracewell
I don’t want this to sound slightly pathetic, but I’d almost say every man should read this if he wants to understand what a woman is thinking during their relationship…
—Ed Vaizey, Break Out Culture
I like it. It’s a dissociative kind of pleasure to be immersed in a story that feels like it has so little to do with the rhythms of my own life—almost as transporting as work of science fiction.
—Mya Spalter, Liber
An unconventional exploration of desire with an older male figure as a creative muse and a frank female perspective on sexuality.
—Cultured Magazine