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First published in "Rolling Stone" magazine in 1971, "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" is Hunter S. Thompson's savagely comic account of what happened to this country in the 1960s. It is told through the writer's account of an assignment he undertook with his attorney to visit Las Vegas and 'check it out.' The book stands as the final word on the highs and lows of that decade, one of the defining works of our time, and a stylistic and journalistic tour de force
An electric piece of work that takes off like a screaming rocket about the world of drugs in Las Vegas.
When Sports Illustrated commissioned Thompson to write a short article on the Mint 400 motorcycle race in Las Vegas, the editors had no idea what they were setting in motion. This book is the defining moment in Thompson's "gonzo journalism" style of writing. He took this style to the limit with this work, barely covering the race and instead writing a series of weird vignettes, paranoid frenzies, and brilliant political prose. If you lived through the turmoil of the Sixties or want to experience the "high and beautiful wave" and see where it broke and gave way to a generation of swine and the songs of the doomed, this is the place to start. Thompson was always a political barometer-he was the voice of truth shouting about the corrupt system. That voice, now stilled by death, is sorely missed. Ron McLarty, though not the frenzied, manic voice one would expect to hear, does an excellent job of navigating Las Vegas. Highly recommended for all libraries.-Theresa Connors, Arkansas Tech Univ., Russellville Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsTo summarize Hunter S. Thompson’s career is nearly impossible. His writing covered sports, politics, personal letters, social commentary, and Gonzo Journalism -- his own brand of hyper-subjective observation of nearly everything that crosses his path. A welcomed troublemaker, the name Hunter S. Thompson conjures the image of a man bearing firearms and whiskey, daring his readers to question their realities.
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February 16, 2009: funny as heck. Very well written in most parts.
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August 26, 2008: Hunter S. Thompson is assigned by Sports Illustrated to cover the Mint 400, a motorcycle race in Las Vegas? desert, during the end of the Nixon regime. When Thompson decides to bring along his drug-pushing attorney, his assignments are set aside as he ends up in a search for the American Dream while in Las Vegas. After receiving the call, Thompson and his attorney spend the rest of the day preparing for their trip to what Thompson believes is the ?heart of the American Dream?. With the meticulous, materialistic manner that Thompson plans his trip, it seems as if Thompson is a believer in the American Dream. At the end of the day Thompson leaves California with a convertible car and a trunk filled with anything they could possibly need while on vacation as well as a suitcase loaded with a cornucopia of narcotics. After leaving California, Thompson and his attorney do not return to a normal state of mind until the end of the trip. To avoid future complications, Thompson and his attorney used pseudonyms while in Las Vegas. With their alter egos, Raoul Duke (Thompson) and Dr. Gonzo (attorney) go around Las Vegas terrorizing the citizens and tourists, trashing their hotel rooms, searching for the American Dream, getting removed from bars and casinos, destroying their rental cars, experimenting with mind expanding psychedelics to explore the human psyche, and somewhere in the whole mess they went to the Mint 400 and the Drug conference that Thompson was later assigned to, though because of his mind?s state, Thompson did not recall too much from either of the events. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream offers an interesting critique of the social state of the United States during the time of Nixon?s presidency, as well as a critique of the American Dream. I found this book unique in the perspective from which it was written. The book has very few dull moments and many outlandish stunts executed by Thompson and his attorney, which are all tied together with the author?s good sense of humor and odd sense of reality. Though at some points the plot may seem a bit vague, the book more than compensates for this with everything else it has to offer.