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T**D
A Merry Important Book!!!
I thought this was a great book. Getting the inside scoop on this historical piece of history and wild guys and gals that made up The Merry Pranksters was extremely valuable to me personally. After reading many books of both the Beat Generation as well as the Hippie Era including a lot of works focusing on the bands, the signature artists of those times, this book is so important regarding the gap between the Beats and the Hippies. This book isn’t sugar coated too much, so it’s raw, honest and exploratory. Learning in good detail about the Pranksters main/notable people, their ties to society and in contrast, their anti-establishment attitudes and spontaneous actions and unspoken rules, is to say the least entertainingly exciting. These folks were a large part in making the mid to late 60’s what they were. As a Grateful Dead lover/DeadHead, it was more than enthusiastic learning about their late entry in this story, along with some amazing figures of the times including Allen Ginsberg, Timothy Leary, Ramrod, Neil Cassidy and of course, Ken Kesey (among many other critical historical persons who all had their part in shaping the counterculture gapping generations). A very quick read, and interesting for me to read about the pioneering psychedelic warriors, how they were “Turned On” and how they spread the message to the masses in such unusual form. The rebels of their time, along with some truly EPIC pranks, parties and perseverance. What I really enjoyed about this book is that it doesn’t highlight a bunch of happy go luck good times. It shows the truly raw side of the bunch. It has some incredibly gloomy details that emerge as a result of being together as a wild “family”, with some eye opening realizations that are important for readers to know. That point being that even in best of times follows the worst of times. There is no light without darkness, “Art is not Eternal”, and a surreal vacation from the normal realm will at some point have you realize that sometimes a normal vacation from the never ending trip is important! So, I found this book to be a fun read, an important piece of literature linking the beats to the hippies, an incredible cast of real life people, and how far some rebels have to go to truly make their mark on society to push what they believe in without resorting to extreme violence.
R**N
hippie pre-history...
i agree with most of the positive reviews here...i'll just add a few notes...for whatever reason, i had always thought this book was fiction (and i don't read much fiction) - but it isn't - the author (Wolfe) adds his own unique stylistic flourish, but otherwise it's a (mostly) 'straight'-up story..it's not about the summer-of-love hippie era, but rather what could be considered the immediate 'prequel' to those times...in the movie 'Magic Trip', made from the film Kesey & the Pranksters took on their x-country bus expedition, you get to see the Pranksters, and they look far more preppy/beat than they do hippie, but you also see signs of what was (soon) to come in their wake...Deadheads may be more than a little shaken to realize how close Tom Wolfe was to the Dead, and yet how amazingly little of them appears in this book - i don't think Wolfe was all that into music, at least not 'Dead' music...Another pretty-much-non appearance is a little group known as the Beatles, who were very much exploding on the music scene just as many of the events of this book were taking place. There's a chapter where the Pranksters actually go to a Beatles show, but they were apparently mostly unimpressed...Beatlemania not their thing...One major puzzle (for me) is that this book wasn't written by Ken Kesey - the centerpiece (& financier) of the book's events and himself a true-blue published author. That's not a knock on Wolfe, just a bit of weird...how is it possible that Kesey didn't write this book?a fun read all the same...
B**R
As I approach 80 years of age, I have ...
As I approach 80 years of age, I have always wondered about those days and how it came about. This book really sets it all in perspective.An interesting part of world history
G**R
everything you wanted to know about the hippies but were afraid to ask
A one-of-a-kind document, stylistically daring and lovingly researched, that shows at once everything appealing and everything appalling about the 60s with a remarkably neutral eye, neither idolizing nor demonizing any of the figures that it shines its piercing light on.
K**L
Jam packed with dull trivia - unreadable IMHO
Somebody wrote after a 1-star review "well I was there". So was I. As a young Englishman, having just finished University I decided to spend my "last summer of freedom" (before taking up my first 9-5 job) exploring that great mysterious, amazing country called America. It was 1966 and I inevitably ended up on the West Coast and took the wonder drug, with some lovely friends who'd showed up from North Carolina.Does Wolfe accurately chronicle that zeitgiest, that era? Not really. He writes interminable pages of detail about the goings on in and around the cult of the Merry Pranksters, for whom Ken Kesey was the leader.Now I have a considerable respect for Kesey as, along with Timothy Leary, he was a leading figure in the LSD revolution, but Wolfe's work I found first of all extremely parochial - he describes one small corner of the acid scene at that time, and not a typical one - in way that is repetitive and BORING. Afler ploughing through a few chapters of this, I gave up looking for substance, and started skimming the rest of the book to see if things changed. It appeared they didn't so, having paid about ten quid for this "famous classic" I decided that my time is too precious to wade through pages of tedious detail, and tossed it in the recycle bin.If you want a read about that era that is well written, doesn't SMOTHER you with detail, and makes you LAUGH as well, you should read the classic" Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas" by Hunter S. Thmpson, who was also "there", but unlike Wolfe speaks from INSIDE the drug experience, and to an excess which none of us "chemical pioneers" would have dared to venture into.
J**N
Not his best work
Regarded as a classic but I found it tedious from start to finish. Maybe only the title chapter of the book was actually interesting. I’m a huge Tom Wolfe fan but this was one of the most painful reads I’ve had in recent years.
G**T
Not only a great read but also a great reference work of the era
Where did the saying "You're either on the bus or you're off the bus" come from ?Who were the real people in Kerouac's On The Road ?How did The Grateful Dead create such awesome sounds ?What did the Pranksters think about their meeting with The Hell's Angels ? (Hunter Thompson reported it in his book of the same name - this gives the other side of the same story)How did The Beatles come up with the idea for their Magical Mystery Tour ?The answer to these and many more questions about the acid culture of the 60s (when it was a lot safer to pop a tab) can be found in this great read. Highly recommended for anyone who was around at the time and can't remember much about it - also recommended for those who can remember and want a great trip down memory lane.
X**Z
Only for the Heads!
Sex, drugs and The Grateful Dead. It should have been fun and fascinating. I just found the style very hard going. It has some interesting ideas and its probably not Wolfe's fault but the Pranksters come over as a bunch of self indulgent kids playing with shiny (day glo) toys while rolling in the slime. Not my thing perhaps?
D**Y
The other half of The New Journalism
It is with great appropriatenessnessness that Hunter Thompson, in an S-less state, is mentioned, as the author of "Hell's Angels", as this is the other half of the equation whose solution is "Fear & Loathing In Las Vegas".A psychedelic splurge of a book, covering the acid-soaked start of the California Counterculture, of a type that the Summer of Love represented an end of, not a beginning. As the half-century approaches, read it and enjoy as the past turns into history - and no, they're not the same thing.
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