Friday, December 30, 2011
Postcard of the Week #26
Labels:
Alabama,
Florence,
large-letter,
Muscle Shoals,
postcard,
Sheffield,
Tuscumbia
Friday, December 23, 2011
Postcard of the Week #25
Labels:
large-letter,
postcard,
Rock Springs,
Wyoming
Sunday, December 18, 2011
The Missing Link Between Beatniks and Hippies
Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Me by Richard Fariña
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Me is one of those novels like Naked Lunch that seems to have been written in a drug-induced frenzy. Though the word frenzy might suggest speed, it took Richard Fariña over five years to write this book. Sometimes I think that all would be revealed if I got high before reading it, sort of like getting high before a Grateful Dead concert. God knows it drags when you're straight and sober.
The main character, Gnossos Pappadopoulis, has long been cited as the missing link between the beatniks and the hippies. He evolves from beatnik into the original, archetypal hippie. He set out on the road and found nothing but did find the keys to inner enlightenment in the form of hallucinogenic drugs. Whereas the beatniks used drugs to escape reality the hippies used them to transcend reality. But in the end it all amounts to the same thing.
Although it was set in early 1958 at Cornell, it wasn't published until the spring of 1966. Fariña was ahead of his time and probably couldn't have gotten the book published before that, but the times were changing and rapidly catching up with him. But by the time the world had caught up with him, he was gone, killed in a motorcycle accident two days after the book was published.
His death only contributed to the cult status that the book would achieve, heralded as it was as being the Catcher in the Rye or On the Road of that decade. It might have been different--no, it would have been different if Fariña had lived to write again. In retrospect it would have been a first novel that merely showed promise rather than the voice of a unrealized genius snuffed out in the prime of life. Like James Dean dying at 25 after having made only three movies rather than growing old and bloated like Brando. Fariña is the James Dean of literature, he will always be young and good looking.
View all my reviews
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Me is one of those novels like Naked Lunch that seems to have been written in a drug-induced frenzy. Though the word frenzy might suggest speed, it took Richard Fariña over five years to write this book. Sometimes I think that all would be revealed if I got high before reading it, sort of like getting high before a Grateful Dead concert. God knows it drags when you're straight and sober.
The main character, Gnossos Pappadopoulis, has long been cited as the missing link between the beatniks and the hippies. He evolves from beatnik into the original, archetypal hippie. He set out on the road and found nothing but did find the keys to inner enlightenment in the form of hallucinogenic drugs. Whereas the beatniks used drugs to escape reality the hippies used them to transcend reality. But in the end it all amounts to the same thing.
Although it was set in early 1958 at Cornell, it wasn't published until the spring of 1966. Fariña was ahead of his time and probably couldn't have gotten the book published before that, but the times were changing and rapidly catching up with him. But by the time the world had caught up with him, he was gone, killed in a motorcycle accident two days after the book was published.
His death only contributed to the cult status that the book would achieve, heralded as it was as being the Catcher in the Rye or On the Road of that decade. It might have been different--no, it would have been different if Fariña had lived to write again. In retrospect it would have been a first novel that merely showed promise rather than the voice of a unrealized genius snuffed out in the prime of life. Like James Dean dying at 25 after having made only three movies rather than growing old and bloated like Brando. Fariña is the James Dean of literature, he will always be young and good looking.
View all my reviews
Friday, December 16, 2011
Man the Beast and the Wild, Wild Women by Virgil Franklin Partch (VIP)
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This collection of cartoons is the kind of cocktail napkin humor that has been forced into near extinction by contemporary political correctness, but if you want to relive those good old days of booze, broads, cigarettes and Mad Men, or if you aren't old enough to have lived through it and want to know what that era was like, pour yourself a highball and peruse the cartoons of ViP. ViP was Virgil Franklin Partch, who was a cartoonist for True, a men's magazine, published by Fawcett, that had been around since 1937 (it lasted until 1975).
Although I've seen a lot of Gold Medal paperback collections of ViP cartoons--Fawcett was the parent company of both GM and True--this was the first Dell collection I've seen.
There's a funny footnote to my buying this today. I only had this one book when the cashier rang up the sale. He looked at the book, smiled, then looked sheepish for a second, scratched his head and said, "Um . . . that'll be thirteen and half . . . no, um, fourteen cents . . ." I confirmed that he was only asking me for fourteen cents. He said, yeah that's why we're called "Half-Price Books," he said, pointing to the cover price of 25 cents.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This collection of cartoons is the kind of cocktail napkin humor that has been forced into near extinction by contemporary political correctness, but if you want to relive those good old days of booze, broads, cigarettes and Mad Men, or if you aren't old enough to have lived through it and want to know what that era was like, pour yourself a highball and peruse the cartoons of ViP. ViP was Virgil Franklin Partch, who was a cartoonist for True, a men's magazine, published by Fawcett, that had been around since 1937 (it lasted until 1975).
Although I've seen a lot of Gold Medal paperback collections of ViP cartoons--Fawcett was the parent company of both GM and True--this was the first Dell collection I've seen.
There's a funny footnote to my buying this today. I only had this one book when the cashier rang up the sale. He looked at the book, smiled, then looked sheepish for a second, scratched his head and said, "Um . . . that'll be thirteen and half . . . no, um, fourteen cents . . ." I confirmed that he was only asking me for fourteen cents. He said, yeah that's why we're called "Half-Price Books," he said, pointing to the cover price of 25 cents.
View all my reviews
Postcard of the Week #24
Friday, December 9, 2011
Postcard of the Week #23
Labels:
California,
large-letter,
postcard,
Santa Cruz
Friday, December 2, 2011
Postcard of the Week #22
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Last of the Black
Rendezvous in Black by Cornell Woolrich
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I had high expectations of this book as it is usually held up as one of Woolrich's better novels, the last of his "Black" novels. But he stretches credulity to an almost absurd length and asks us to buy into it. I also have trouble following the storyline sometimes because his subtlety is such that it's overlooked and I find myself rereading passages to figure out the implications.
The story opens when a young girl, waiting outside a drugstore for her beau, is killed by a whiskey bottle falling from the sky. The course of the novel is the boyfriend finding out who was responsible. It turns out there are five possible suspects. So he decides that all five must pay the price he did. The rest is as absurdly plotted, think I Married a Dead Man.
Now that I've read all of the "Black" novels I realize that it is indeed a series in theme, involving as they do revenge, serial killing and a searching for something lost to the protagonists.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I had high expectations of this book as it is usually held up as one of Woolrich's better novels, the last of his "Black" novels. But he stretches credulity to an almost absurd length and asks us to buy into it. I also have trouble following the storyline sometimes because his subtlety is such that it's overlooked and I find myself rereading passages to figure out the implications.
The story opens when a young girl, waiting outside a drugstore for her beau, is killed by a whiskey bottle falling from the sky. The course of the novel is the boyfriend finding out who was responsible. It turns out there are five possible suspects. So he decides that all five must pay the price he did. The rest is as absurdly plotted, think I Married a Dead Man.
Now that I've read all of the "Black" novels I realize that it is indeed a series in theme, involving as they do revenge, serial killing and a searching for something lost to the protagonists.
View all my reviews
Labels:
black novels,
Cornell Woolrich,
noir,
Rendezvous in Black
Friday, November 25, 2011
Postcard of the Week #21
Labels:
California,
Laguna Beach,
large-letter,
postcard
Friday, November 18, 2011
Postcard of the Week #20
Labels:
large-letter,
New Mexico,
postcard,
Tucumcari
Monday, November 14, 2011
Friday, November 11, 2011
Postcard of the Week #19
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Poster of the Week #19
Friday, November 4, 2011
Postcard of the Week #18
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Monday, October 31, 2011
Friday, October 28, 2011
Is the Bug Dead?
Here are some of the great Volkswagen ads created by Doyle Dane Bernbach in the 1960s.
These ads, as well as stills from the television commercials, were collected in a book entitled, Is the Bug Dead? published in 1983.
Postcard of the Week #17
Labels:
Lake of the Ozarks,
large-letter,
Missouri,
postcard
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Monday, October 24, 2011
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