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Chester Anderson (1932–1991)

Auteur de The Butterfly Kid

8+ oeuvres 352 utilisateurs 12 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Chester Anderson

Comprend aussi: John Valentine (1)

Œuvres de Chester Anderson

The Butterfly Kid (1967) 163 exemplaires
Ten Years to Doomsday (1964) 124 exemplaires
Puppies (1979) 40 exemplaires
Fox and Hare (1980) 12 exemplaires
The Pink Palace (1963) 5 exemplaires
Dieci anni all'ora X 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

The Witches' Almanac: Aries 1976 to Pisces 1977 (1976) — Contributeur — 8 exemplaires

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Written in 1967 this book reflects the real hippy cutture- or at least the author's perception of it at the time., The plot is thin, almost non-existent and only the main characters show any development. The fun of the book is in the language and attitudes.

re-read 8/31/2023
 
Signalé
catseyegreen | 7 autres critiques | Aug 31, 2023 |
I loved this when I read this as a teenager but having bought the new version, I found a couple of sentences that I found deeply disturbing so can't rate it as highly as before.
 
Signalé
LizTuckwell | 7 autres critiques | Jul 8, 2022 |
When your father leaves you a brothel as an inheritance, there is little to do, but continue running it. You tell yourself, you'll try to find the women some other line of work, and eventually close the place down...but.....it was smirking time on occasion, but since I had already had some experience of the real trade, albeit only by delivering newspapers to one, in the cold grey light of a Calgary dawn....it wasn't a laugh riot.
 
Signalé
DinadansFriend | Nov 9, 2020 |
Merry lobstery Christmas! Come take a Reality Pill and make all your trippiest dreams come true!

Or rather, sidle up to your best buds, take as much LSD or tokes that you like, and welcome the alien invasion, man. Don't forget to jam and rap! This is gonna be one wildly imaginative ride. :)

Welcome to the hippiest days of NYC when walking hallucinations roam the streets or transform them, where milling crowds take the drugs that let their imaginations change reality, where six-foot pacifist lobsters in Jesus Robes enlist a devoted hippie pacifist to fight their wars for them.

WHAT COULD GO WRONG?

Honestly, I've read a good number of mind-blowingly imaginative books that revel in the strange and the wonderful and just don't care whether or not you're on any mind-altering substances. Hell, I've written a few books like that, myself. But after all this time and a rather huge bibliography to draw from, I can honestly rank this one up there with the very best. :)

Context is important. This came out at the height or the very end of the beginning of the LSD heyday in 1967. Chester Anderson more than capitalizes on the movement... he puts himself right in the tale. As a character. With reality slipping all the time.

This is a real trip and a half to read and imagine. I bet he had a fantastic time writing it. :) It takes courage, strength, and fortitude to let quite this much of yourself hang out for the world to see.

Of course, I really should mention that it would work just as well to read this in today's age for one good reason. Comics and superheroes play a huge part. Context-wise, back then, it was usual for kids and a very select number of the counterculture to still love Marvel. Not like today where the love has gone totally mainstream.

So, for the day, it's not exactly normal to read about dropping acid and going totally green-lantern in the middle of NYC. I'm a huge PKD fan, but even he never pulled something quite this extroverted. :)

Merry trippy Christmas! :)

… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
bradleyhorner | 7 autres critiques | Jun 1, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
8
Aussi par
1
Membres
352
Popularité
#67,994
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
12
ISBN
14
Langues
1
Favoris
1

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