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Hunter S. Thompson's books include Fear and Loathing in America, Screwjack, Hell's Angels, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, The Proud Highway, Better Than Sex, The Rum Diary, and Kingdom of Fear. A contributor to various national and international publications, including a weekly sports column for espn.com, Thompson lives in a fortified compound near Aspen, Colorado.
Dr. Hunter Thompson, the brilliantly notorious father of "Gonzo" journalism and iconoclastic author of such counterculture classics as Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, launches this landmark collection of his most unforgettable reportage. Available for the first time in a trade paperback edition, it is the perfect companion to Generation of Swine, the second volume of Gonzo Papers.
… there are some sections of The Great Shark Hunt, reprinted from such unlikely periodicals as The Reporter, The National Observer and The New York Times magazine, that are surprisingly straight, ungeeky and often quite moving. We are reminded that Dr. Thompson, who considers himself an outlaw, was from the beginning attracted to those who were outside the protection of the law or who were oppressed by that law … He is also, as if this needs to be said, hilarious
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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September 29, 2005: Merely the latest in the long line of exceptionally talented goons who, because they are totally incompatiable with society and thus have been kicked out, are the only ones truly capable of writing about our society. Lucretius, Juvenal, Chaucer, Swift... the list is endless. The Great Shark Hunt is possibly the finest compendium of satire by a modern author, because, let's face it, proper Gonzo literature is fiction, and apparently that is the best way to tell the truth. Furthermore, it is journalism of the highest quality, that seems to relate an eyewitness account in the most hair-raising manner, and whose level of grammatical perfection is matched by few. That Thompson has gone over the top in attempting to outrage as many people as possible, is undeniable, but this collection reflects a time when such behaviour was outrageous maybe now we are indifferent, but The Great Shark Hunt should still be an inspiraton to us all. If you enjoyed ?Katzenjammer: Soon to be a major motion picture? or the novel ?Get Shorty,? then Thompson will be right up your alley. Great stuff. Finally, someone who ?understands.?
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May 11, 2005: I must say that this was a very enjoyable read. I began reading this book without really knowing what it was. I'm not acutally the greatest fan of journalism, but Thompson is an amazing journalist. I've read a few of his other books icluding Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Rum diaries so I knew he was an amazing author. I don't think I've ever read journalistic work and got as interested as I did with this composition. I would definatly recommend this to any fan of Thompsons, or just a lover of journalism in general. He was never afraid to cover the story that noone else wanted to. Not only did he cover those stories, but he covered them well and added his Thompsonesq flair. I also enjoyed parts in this composition that gave further information on his previous works, and the stories that he derived his stories from