Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Other American Stories

by Hunter S. Thompson
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Other American Stories
published
May 5th 1998 (first published 1971) by Modern Library
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binding
Hardcover, 304 pages

isbn
0679602984   (isbn13: 9780679602989)

description
Dr. Thompson made the list of inspirational scribes when I polled in a recent writing workshop, and why not? Back in a spiffy Modern Library edition, ...more





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Nathan
09/17/07

bookshelves: biography, fiction, history, history-crime
Read in September, 1998
recommends it for: People who want to read this lame, personal review.
I recently went to Las Vegas for the first, and probably only, time in my life. I hadn't read this book in years, and previously, it hadn't even been my favorite Hunter S. Thompson work. Thompson is dearly missed by many people, and on a personal level, I miss him deeply. He spoke to a true astonishment at the complete, unrelenting fuckedupedness of America and her politics, and he did it with a bite that was deserved and unmatched. He probably could have been a very rich super-novelist of popul...more
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Steven
02/04/08

bookshelves: 1001, addiction, americanhistory
Read in January, 2008
I loved this book so much, I really have no idea what to write about it, so I have settled on simply included the wikipedia plot description and an excerpt of the wave speech.

Plot - Journalist Raoul Duke and attorney Dr. Gonzo travel to Las Vegas in 1971 to cover a motorcycle race for Sports Illustrated and enjoy a haphazardly planned vacation. As Duke and Gonzo live out the final days of the counter-culture through the use of drugs like LSD, cocaine, mescaline, and cannabis (among others)...more
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Nicholas
bookshelves: comedy
Read in May, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Amar
09/15/08

Read in January, 1984
fear and loathing in las vegas
starts out strong, best opening sequence ever
doing fast miles on the highway while carelessly handling very expensive drugs....
he jeers/jaunts at the locals, the money,
the shabby run down two-bit nature of it all
he hits the bar, the dirt races are off, another drink, dust everywhere, visibility zero
back at the hotel his "attorney" has kidnapped, drugged and done who knows what to this crazy lsd girl. she sits there drawing pictures of streisa...more
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Chris
02/09/08

bookshelves: culture
Read in July, 2006
Welcome to bat country.

The only other Thompson book I've read was Hell's Angels, and I must say, it's quite a change in tone. That book, written in 1966, was a well-organized, clear and compelling account of a social microcosm and its relationship to the broader American society.

Five years later, and Thompson has turned into a gibbering maniac.

The book is compelling, if only to see what the hell happens next, much in the same...more
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Martin
01/02/08

Read in September, 1999
recommends it for: Those who buy the ticket and take the ride
A co-worker, whom happened to be completely insane, sized me up once and told me I was ready. He handed to me a VHS tape bearing the title, "Where the Buffalo Roam". At the time I was living a lifestyle of depraved decadence and over consumption of massive amounts of drugs and booze. While this particular journey had many peeks and valleys the next step in my literary evolution took place under a haze of pot smoke, a quart of rum and a pack and a half a day tobacco habit. After wat...more
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Jon
09/25/08

Read in September, 2008
recommends it for: Anyone interested in 60s drug culture
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Bart
09/10/08

Read in September, 2008
recommends it for: Any openminded reader
One needn’t have ever had a sip of alcohol or a milligram of any drug to enjoy this novel. The passion that comes through, the sheer euphoria for life as a pursuit of chemicals, makes this novel as enjoyable a read as any you’ll find.

The drug culture has been dashed on the rocky beaches of history, we now know. But here’s the thing: Hunter S. Thompson knew it better than we did, forty years before we did. If you come to this novel with an obdurate desire to discredit a certain piece...more
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Julia
Julia rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
08/18/07

Read in August, 2007
recommends it for: no one under 18
Although this book came highly recommended and does have its literary moments, it is hard for me to totally appreciate it as others do. There seems to be no real point besides portraying two semi-depressed, drugged out, lying crazys in the already twisted city of Las Vegas and how they systematically destroy their health with a wide assortment of illegal substances and cheat death repeatedly. This book is in itself a psychedelic twisted journey through the drug crazed head of one of America's mo...more
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Sarah
06/08/07

bookshelves: released
Read in February, 2007
It seems appropriate to be writing my review of this book while not quite in my right mind. I can't blame my state of mind on any of the drugs mentioned in the book; mine is just from a migraine. I've hallucinated twice, once when my mother gave me Dramamine in case I'd get sea sick on a whale watching trip (I've never gotten sea sick) and once when on Vicadin after Sean was born (I immediately stopped taking it after that). I've never gotten drunk to the point of losing control of myself or ne...more
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Jeffrey
bookshelves: popular-fiction
Just out of curiosity, I read this book. Hunter is a classic. If you haven't read this one, do so. This comes across as an autobiography, but with Thompson you never know. A story of drugged out, super hip, insanity in a world gone wrong. Ahhh, yeah, this world. Has the world ever been right? No problems? Utopian? As the great Elastigirl always says, I don't think so.

More specifically, the book is a first-person account by a journalist named Raoul Duke on a trip to Las Vegas with Dr. Gonzo,...more
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Tiffany
bookshelves: read-once
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: Aging drug addict hippies, current drug addict hippies, hipster literary types
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Matt
Matt rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
10/04/07

bookshelves: essays-and-journalism, literature
Read in October, 2007
I began this thinking that I would not like it that much, but more than the cover, you can't judge a book by the people who love it. The main piece, Fear and Loathing itself, impressed me as a piece of writing, but I was also rather appalled by the paranoid disaster that was the combined forces of Duke and his Attorney. Beautifully written, I found very little admirable in what they did, and was continually amazed that neither had died. After I finished it I read the original jacket copy for Fea...more
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Andrew
08/27/08

bookshelves: fiction, literary
Hunter Thompson originally wanted to be a novelist, but (according to many biographers) he lacked the self-confidence to follow it through. Given the relatively option of writing whatever came into his head (and rewriting well-worn gonzo-isms), he chose the easy option in his later career rather than choosing to work on fiction. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas remains his best work, and a glimpse of what might have been, had he stuck to fiction.

For this is fiction. On close reading, it's far ...more
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Paul
10/15/07

Read in April, 2007
recommends it for: People who think that the "counter-culture" of drugs and violence was a bulwark of the mid-1900s
I really disliked this book and I felt awful about feeling that way. It is a cult classic and was a representation of the American Dream at its best and worked. But I hated it.

The story is all well and good, but I do not associate the American life that I have led as a gross misuse of enjoyment or a bender or excess. Maybe I am too young for this book. It had many of the themes attributed to the 1980s that I had heard in stories, but I was just a pup even for those times.

Admittedly, I m...more
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Kelly
07/27/08

bookshelves: favorites
Read in January, 1997
It's a classic. I could go on forever with this one, as I love to do, but I've been writing all night and I'm tired. And I also don't feel like a review from me on this book is necessary. It's a classic man! If you haven't read it you need to! This is one of those books everyone should read before they die. It's like not seeing Star Wars. It in itself played and covers an important piece of our culture and you just gotta respect that. And watching the movie doesn't count. It's not only ...more
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Fee
09/29/08

bookshelves: currently-reading, q12008
Text to Self:

Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas is a great book that tells the twisted story of the "American Dream" and the drugs taken to get there. The book connects to me in a small way. I have seen how drugs can change people and ruin their lives, maybe not to the extreme this book shows, but I have seen it. This book shows how the drugs can catch up to someone and how it hurts them. This book puts fear of the uncontrolled drug craving way that people can get when they are lost ...more
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Dan
06/27/07

Read in September, 1998
recommends it for: people who like drugs, hippies, freaks, americans
I was somewhere on the first page when the drugs began to take hold (of the protagonists.) Apparently, they were on the edge of the desert, somewhere near Barstow.

This book is amazing. This counter culture classics is one of my favorites.

Often criticized (alternately praised) as pro-drug, I did not get that impression at all. This book is about drugs and America. But it isn't necessarily for or against either one of those.

When Hunter wrote this, America was in the depths of assau...more
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LordBeardsley
bookshelves: read2007
Read in June, 2007
recommends it for: all of the two people over age 16 who haven't already read this
You know, if this was the first of Mr. Thompson's books I had read, I never would have picked up another one. As far as I can tell, this is one of his weaker ones and is really the most well-known only for the long, droning drug bullshit. Reading drug writing is about as interesting is watching paint dry. There are little kernals of hilarity (because he's a fantastic writer who is able to describe pitch perfectly the bizarre ineptitude of the human experience) which saves it from being snoringly...more