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Tag: Book Review

Text as Substance and Style in The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test

The style of Tom Wolfe’s The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test is not the least bit out of the ordinary for writers of the beat movement, but Wolfe may have captured the pulse of the art better than any of his contemporaries by selecting a perfectly evocative subject matter in the guise of a straight edge reporter following one of North America’s most profound cultural awakenings, or, in layman’s terms, he wrote one heck of a great book—widely acclaimed because of the way it conveys facts on the ground as well as vibes in the air. However, whether you are the aforementioned layman, a psychedelic drug aficionado, or a historian of 1960’s counterculture, be wary of The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, because you may come to hate it. The warning above is in no way meant to state that the book lacks merit. Instead, the shot across the bow is merely intended to point out that Read more…


A Salute to the Trippers in The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test

The story told in Tom Wolfe’s The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, a book concerning an experiment to introduce radical ideas about the use of recreational drugs, is generally well-known. It concerns, first and foremost, the now iconic day-glow school bus loaded down for a trip across the continental USA; a trip during which bus pilots Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters became a cultural tour de force as they played new music, produced new movies, and took all manner of new drugs on their travels from California to New York and back again. It is a story that has been woven into the fabric of 1960s culture, and it is a story that has informed subsequent generations, influencing social movements in the 70s, 80s, 90s, aughts, and twenty-teens.  But as much as the story has saturated modern American thought and as much as the bus has become an icon of its age, the characters who Read more…


Deliberately Reading Walden; or, Life in the Woods

But is it any good? Despite what you may hear from his critics, Thoreau’s Walden; or, Life in the Woods is not some sepia-toned memoir, nor is it a scientific exploration of the natural world. Instead, Thoreau describes, in page after page, a vivid exploration of the mind and its reflection upon the natural world. At one end of his personal journey he fought to bend his will, control his animal tendencies and live out an ascetic life. At the other end, he gave in to nature’s primal beck and call. Pulled between the two extremes of the natural order, Thoreau was able to explore his inner limits, or in his own words, out in the wilds he was able to experience ‘earth’s eye[s]; looking into which the beholder measures the depth of his own nature.’ For those who choose not to gaze into the natural world (for every one of us who is not Read more…


Transformative Discourse in Walden; or, Life in the Woods

Still relevant? Walden; or, Life in the Woods, a collection of Henry David Thoreau’s writings on the experiment of living alone, is a book of the highest praise. It speaks across an almost two hundred year gap in time to impart important lessons about humanity’s role in the natural world; and although the ideas are much, much older than Thoreau, the account given in Walden is decidedly impactful, especially today, as the human race’s migration into dense urban environments seems less like a long-term trend and more like a permanent development: one that has not only left much of the countryside depopulated, but also alienated generations of humanity from ways of life that were considered familiar just a handful of decades ago and the norm not long before that. If you are unfamiliar with the book Walden; or, Life in the Woods simply know that Thoreau set out to discard the trappings of society and Read more…