Naked Lunch: The Restored Text

by William S. Burroughs
Naked Lunch: The Restored Text
book data
6,786 ratings, 3.45 average rating, 579 reviews (more data...)
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published
January 26th 2004 (first published 1959) by Grove Press

binding
Paperback, 304 pages

isbn
0802140181    (isbn13: 9780802140180)

description
"He was," as Salon's Gary Kamyia notes, "20th-century drug culture's Poe, its Artaud, its Baudelaire. He was the prophet of the litera...more




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R.
09/27/07
R. added it (review of isbn 0802132952)

Found this file I started on my computer June 9, 2007:

Hypertext Reading of Naked Lunch

Reading Naked Lunch as it was intended: open the book at any page and just read what is there. Keeping track of pages read, so that there is no duplication and each page is given its consideration. Am a bit anal about these things, so I'm not going to cut in the middle of a chapter...going to read nearest chapter from where I pry open the book. The book is never meant to end, because ...more
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Joe S
11/29/07
Joe S rated it: 1 of 5 stars

bookshelves: novels
So, basically, the meaningless drivel of the very first circuit boi? Seriously? Maybe I would have liked it better if I weren't already sick to death of all the hallucinatory narratives this book spawned. This is a structure that needed to be created only once to get the bastard over with and properly buried.

Drug narratives are always only autobiographies obsessed with the author's secret obscene wishes and (inevitably) Neanderthal politics. They are the literary equivalent of a frot...more
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  7 comments

Lauryl
03/11/08
Lauryl rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Read in March, 2009
recommends it for: people who are not my mom
The flaw of the 5-star rating system is in trying figure out whether you should award stars based on how much you liked a book, or based on how "good" you think a book is. These two criteria are often distinct from each other, and Naked Lunch, at least for me, is a perfect example of this. I think that Naked Lunch is a brilliant book, an that Burroughs is one of our century's great literary geniuses. So, that makes it a five star book. But did I enjoy reading it? Sometimes very mu...more
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Ivy
02/14/08
Ivy rated it: 1 of 5 stars

bookshelves: read-half-of-it
Read in February, 2008
recommended to Ivy by: Donald Fagen and Walter Becker
recommends it for: people who are into this sort of thing
I made it just a little bit past the passage mentioning Steely Dan the dildo (actually, it's three generations of dildos all thriving under the Steely Dan name). And then, at the request of my old man who was sick of hearing me complain and puzzle over this book, I put it down for good. I don't like to leave books unfinished, but a girl can only swallow so many reiterations of the same tired orgiastic death-by-hanging scenario before she puts her foot down and says NO MORE!
I almost lik...more
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  2 comments

Inder
04/19/08
Inder rated it: 1 of 5 stars

Read in January, 2003
Ugh. I'm sure this is very brilliant and all, but it's extremely unpleasant to read. Physically repulsive, it's enough to scare anyone away from heroin, and yet, in some ways, it glorifies the experience in a self-indulgent way. Mind you, the book has no plot, and is just one drug-induced hallucination after another. It gets pretty boring after a while. Even extreme disgust gets old after about 50 pages. You're so numb after a few pages that Burrough's attempts to get nastier and nastier and sho...more
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Christos
01/23/08
Christos rated it: 1 of 5 stars

recommended to Christos by: Dr. Kevorkian
recommends it for: college students desperate to look cooler than their friends who read the DaVinci Code.
To quote Nelson Muntz of Springfield,

"I find TWO things wrong with that title".

All kidding aside, there are some books that I will dub way, WAY (did I say way?) too self-indulgent that others will brand 'genius' or 'groundbreaking'. This is probably one of them. It may be 'cool' to dig the hipster vibe and carry around a worn paperback copy of (for example) On the Road in your backpocket with your notes scribbled in the margins, as verification of membership i...more
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Michael Kneeland
07/04/08
Michael Kneeland rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Read in December, 2003
I'm not an uber beat generation guru, but I'm fairly certain that Naked Lunch is the final destination to the journey started by Jack Kerouac in On the Road. It is very rhythmic (try reading it out loud) but also incredibly stream-of-conscious, much more so than Kerouac's novel (and he can get pretty damn stream-of-conscious).

This novel depicts the life (if you want to call it that) of a junkie in the '60s who travels from America to Mexico and finally lands [halfway across the glob...more
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tadpole
03/29/08
tadpole rated it: 5 of 5 stars

bookshelves: 1001, burroughs
Read in June, 1992
What can you say about Uncle Bill that hasn't already been said? I know that there was an obscenity trial over this book back in the day, but it still amazes me that he wasn't killed by an angry mob in the streets. Remember this was published in an America that didn't allow married couples on television shows to sleep in the same bed or use the word "pregnant". The text is obviously extremely disturbing. Make no mistake, reading this book is an endurance test. If you make it through yo...more
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Hunter
10/09/07
Hunter rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: The few, the brave, and those eager to know where Steely Dan got their name.
This book makes no sense, not that it matters. Burroughs wrote it over the course of a year in a one-room apartment over a Moroccan male brothel, strung out on heroin. What resulted is a disturbing, satirical, bitter flood of images. To call it a meditation or a portrait doesn't do it justice: "Naked Lunch" is the lifeblood of a dying mind. It is a collection of vaguely-linked scenes, images, and flash pieces some humor, some horror, some pornography. As you might expect, it dra...more
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Mike Philbin
though it was an honorable pseudo-biopic, screw that David Cronenberg film - it was sex-dead. I want my Naked Lunch RAW, dripping blood, other bodily fluids and sexual grease, for K-rist's sake.

as for the book, it's lovely-strange in a way that needs to be experienced by most adult readers.

it's mankind's right.
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John
10/30/07
John rated it: 5 of 5 stars

Read in January, 1996
recommends it for: oh yes
well...nothing is true and everything is permitted. that is the lesson, isn't it? cut up the words, more words come. cut up the book, get a new book. cut up your life, get a new life. however, shoot heroin for years and accidentally kill your wife and you could end up writing one of the greatest literary achievements of all time.
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  1 comment

AJ Griffin
07/02/07
AJ Griffin is currently reading it

bookshelves: currently-reading
recommends it for: drug addicts and crazy people
From the 20 pages I've read so far, it seems like starting a heroin habit is a bad idea.
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  3 comments

Maclain Rigdon
07/31/08
Maclain Rigdon rated it: 5 of 5 stars

I read this book because Burroughs shows up as Old Bull Lee in several of Kerouac's books, and I wanted to get a different perspective. What I got was a bombardment of the senses. I had to literally fight my way through this book, but by the end I started thinking of it like one big long joke, like "The Aristocrats" and I was able to stomach it much easier like that. To be honest, I am fascinated by this work, and I plan to read essays online and otherwise to find out more about thi...more
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Maureen
07/05/08
Maureen rated it: 5 of 5 stars

bookshelves: experimental, novel
Read in January, 1977
recommended to Maureen by: Patti Smith
recommends it for: everyone
I am not sure if Naked Lunch is really a book, or a piece of experiential art. On either level, it works if you relax, let the words wash over you, and don't spend too much time trying to figure it out. It is like one of those mosaic pictures where, on the micro level, all it looks like is a bunch of little squares. When you step back, though, you see the Mona Lisa. This book wormed its way into my psyche to such an extent that I started spontaneously quoting from its pages in all sorts of i...more
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Paul Grimsley
recommends it for: people wanting to think
i don't think that it's his best book by any stretch -- i think that title belongs to junky or queer which hang together better and just have something in the writing that marks them above this. but then i still think the writing is brilliant in this book. sure, it is not an easy book and i am not surprised that it defeats so many people. i had to teach myself to read burroughs and this was nothing compared to the later cut-up technique books like nova express and the ticket that exploded. it is...more
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matt
02/17/08
matt rated it: 3 of 5 stars

Read in March, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Rachel
10/07/07
Rachel rated it: 5 of 5 stars

bookshelves: to-re-read, weird
Read in April, 2001
(written 4/01)

Wow. This book has a shock factor but once I got past that I began admiring it. It is intense and grotesque but the language is beautiffully insanely constructed. People tried to have it banned, unsuccessfully, after Ginsberg & Norman mailer argued its value in court. Naked Lunch is hard to swallow but definitely worth a second attempt -- I need to read it again.

"Control can never be a means to any practical end ... It can never be a means to anyth...more
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Joseph
07/30/07
Joseph rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0802132952)

Read in January, 1995
recommends it for: Mature indivduals 16+
One of my key criteria when evaluating any work of art is the time test. I view this test as twofold. I start by asking if the piece is relevant beyond the moment, generation, age in which it was published. And if it is relevant, I ask how does the piece stay with me during my brief life time.

I first read Naked Lunch during my frosh year in High school. I didn’t have a clue as to who William S. Burroughs was, I hadn’t heard of the beat poets, sex was an allusion, and opium w...more
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James
07/10/08
James rated it: 1 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0007204442)

bookshelves: books-left-unfinished
Read in June, 2008
Naked. Hmmm, as "in the emperor has no clothes".

This book - what little I could stand reading of it - was a bewildering jumble of the undelineated thoughts and actions of the main character. Perhaps it is an accurate depiction of the mind under the influence of hallucinogenic drugs, but (or so) it was annoying, confusing and poorly written.

It reminded me of jokes about "Beat" poetry in the 50s -
"Dirt,
flower bed rocking horse jello, ...more
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Michael
05/29/07
Michael rated it: 2 of 5 stars

Call me unhip, but...
When Burroughs was living in Tangiers, Allen Ginsberg went to visit him, and found the former so gone on heroin he (Burroughs) was just lying in a heap on the floor of a dingy, purulent apartment. Ginsberg spent an hour at his friend's side, without getting any response, or ever bearing witness to Burroughs even knowing he (Ginsberg (or, hell, Burroughs himself)) was there, and then left. Burroughs' life in Tangiers was evidently lived this way: only moving when he w...more
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Naked Lunch (Paperback)
Naked Lunch (Paperback)
Naked Lunch (Harper Perennial Modern Classics)
Naked Lunch: Modern Classic Collection (The Restored Text)
Naked Lunch (Paperback)







quotes from this book

"I was standing outside myself trying to stop those hangings with ghost fingers... I am a ghost wanting what every ghost wants-a body-after the Long Time moving through odorless alleys of space where no life is, only the colorless no smell of death...Nobody can breath and smell it through pink convolutions of gristle laced with crystal snot, time shit and black blood filters of flesh." More quotes...


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