Mike Sager’s bestselling debut collection is now available as an E-book with new material added.
Scary Monsters and Super Freaks brings together nineteen of Sager’s best true crime stories. “The Devil and John Holmes,” inspired the movies Boogie Nights and Wonderland. “The Martyrdom of Veronica Guerin” became a Disney film starring Cate Blanchett. In “Janet’s World,” Washington Post Pulitzer fabulist Janet Cooke gives her only complete interviews; in the “Final Days of Gary Condit” the disgraced Republican congressman and his wife speak out publically for the first and only time about the events surrounding the death of the young intern Chandra Levy. “Damn, They Gonna Lynch Us,” the story of the beating by LAPD police of black motorist Rodney Glenn King, is the only complete journalistic investigation of a case that forever changed the racial history of America. Likewise “The Teachings of Don Carlos” an in-depth examination of the controversial life and death of the shaman and writer Carlos Castaneda. From the drug-fueled escapades of “ the King of Funk” Rick James, to the shocking AIDS death of the seminal rap figure Eazy E, to the mass suicide of the Heaven’s Gate Cult, to actor Rob Lowe's scandalous sex romp with an underage hairdresser at the Atlanta Democratic Convention, to a raid on a government research facility in the company of members of the Animal Liberation Front, to the fall from grace of the beautiful porn star Savannah… this collection of articles brings pop culture’s seamy underbelly into sharp focus. Says E! Online: “You know those engrossing books that keep you up all night? Don’t pick this one up if you have somewhere to be the next morning.”
“I can recognize the truth in these Sager stories—demoralizing tales about the darkest possible side of wretched humanity.” —Hunter S. Thompson, author, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.
Mike Sager is a best-selling author and award-winning reporter. A former Washington Post staff writer under Watergate investigator Bob Woodward, he worked closely, during his years as a contributing editor to Rolling Stone, with gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson. Sager is the author of four collections of non-fiction, two novels, and one biography. He has served for more than fifteen years as a writer at large for Esquire. In 2010 he won the American Society of Magazine Editors’ National Magazine Award for profile writing for his article “The Man Who Never Was.” Many of his stories have been optioned for film. For more information, please see www.mikesager.com.
Sager is also the founding editor and publisher of The Sager Group. for more information, please see www.TheSagerGroup.Net.
Ok, let me just get right to it, if you're going to have a title like "Scary Monsters and Super Freaks," you'd better have some remarkable stories within. However, I didn't read any that I would categorize as even slightly impressive.
I give it a solid 3 stars because there were a couple of well put together stories. I still can't get past the "Super Freak" reference to Rick James, you have got to be kidding me, I was expecting stories about all things depraved and unspeakable, but I got my name is Rick James Bitch lol. Moreover, if you want to read about Rodney King, Rick James and Janet Cooke then pick this one up for sure. If you want to read about Temple of Doom' the mass murder in a Buddhist temple in Arizona just know you will have to wade through stories like 'Little Girl Lost' the story about the adult film star Savannah.
This 2003 book of articles collected from Rolling Stone, GQ, and Esquire is organized with porn stars, musicians, and politicians first, then moves to corrupt cops, criminals, and cult leaders in the latter half. Some of the stories have a rubber-necking attraction, like the Rob Lowe DNC story. The story I enjoyed the most had nothing to do with pop culture, about the survival story of Lee Risler. The final (and longest) story about Carlos Castaneda was the longest and the most unfocused. I hoped the profiles of the people in Castaneda's orbit would be tied together, but it disappointingly it was not.
The title of this book leads you to believe there will be sections on both David Bowie and Rick James. There is nothing about Bowie, so if that's your draw, as it was mine, this isn't worth your time. The stories are largely "surface" content that you could find in any news article, not a ton of in-depth information. I struggled to get through this book.
There are some gems in this book. Great yarns, and rip-roaringly told. Sometimes, Sager's style is too much - but the stories still reward. Other times, he is the right tonic to give a real push to the details. A blindingly great survey of pop-cultural profiles from another time altogether.
I have no idea how I got the idea to read this book. It wasn't on the list of new books at the library, and when I went to see what section it came from, it was True Crime. Despite my liking for the genre, I get bored looking at the books in that section.
Yet I checked it out months and months ago, returned it without reading, and put it on my account's "to read" list.
Weird. Anyway.
What an amazing book! These are the kinds of stories that I live for when reading an otherwise uninteresting magazine (Rolling Stone for the last five years, I'm looking at you). Each story yanked me in tightly, and I ended up with three post-it notes to look up more information on the subjects later.
The only story that didn't interest me at all was The Teachings of Don Juan. It was beautifully flesh out, and well written, but it bored me.
And of course, because I'm a reading exhibitionist, the best part was closing the book and leaving it, face up, when people were around. Waiting.
Doot dee doot dee do..."WHAT is the title of that book? WHAT is it about?"
I met Mike Sager at an alt-journalist convention in San Francisco earlier this year, where he discussed his work. He's a great pulp-nonfiction writer, specializing in the skeezy side of American culture (although perhaps his greatest piece is about murdered Irish reporter Veronica Guerin). Before hearing him speak, I had only read one of his articles, about a gang in Venice, California, slowly coming apart due to the influx of crack into their neighborhood in the early 1980s. The story has this perfect ending that I thought had to have been made up, or manipulated in some fashion. I asked him about it, and apparently there was no fabrication on his part. Of course, he also told me he was supposed to go along with the gang during a drive-by, but the hit never happened for some reason. Now that has to be bullshit.
This guy is a great reporter! This is an anthology of his work for Rolling Stone and GQ. Not only does he have great profiles of John Holmes and Rob Lowe from the height (nadir?) of their infamy. He also has a great "where is she now" piece about his ex-girlfriend Janet Cooke, who wrote a fake story for the Washington Post, won a Pulitzer for it, gave it back, and then largely went into hiding. One of my few worries about the weakening business model of traditional media is that guys like this won't have a venue for their work. Maybe he would find it insulting that I would worry about him--maybe he's doing just fine--but where's the next Sager going to come from?
Excellent book by free lance journalist Mike Sager, (who often writes for "Rolling Stone") on subjects from the Heaven's Gate cult, (who committed suicide back in '97 trying to follow the Hale-Bopp comet) the twisted saga of John Holmes and the weird story of Carlos Castaneda. Along the way he covers the Veronica Guerin story, and alot of true crime. He bottom dwells at times but can really tell a story.
Fascinating collection of essays in the "new journalism" vein, focused on a number of high-profile criminal cases and shady individuals. Amongst the best pieces are the sad story of porn star Savannah, who committed suicide after a car accident, the murder of Irish journalist Veronica Guerin, and a creepy look inside the Heaven's Gate cult. A good, gripping read.
I picked this up for reading on the Wonderland murders. that leads and following is an uneven collection of sex and true crime with a standout piece on murder in a southwest American Buddhist monastery. concluding is the most interesting piece. it pulls back the veil of Carlos Castaneda on both his dissembling and his parasitic sycophants
I haven't finished reading this book, but I did read a few chapters. I mostly bought for the chapter on my favorite super freak and yours, Rick James and the chapter on the Wonderland murders. I'll let you know what I think of the book once I'm finished. :)
Was not what I expected. Too much background detail that was not at all interesting. I read about 1/2 the stories, couldnt make myself stick with it and read the whole book as I was uninterested in it.
Compulsively readable collection of essays on all manner of salacious topics. The best (and most famous) essay is Sager's feature about John Holmes and the Wonderland murders, but it's far from the only standout in this wonderful compilation.
I liked it. I bought this book a while ago, probably for the John Holmes article. But I really enjoyed most of the other ones too. Heaven's Gate, Carlos Castaneda and Gary Fannon were probably my faves. Oh shit the Rob Lowe one was awesome too.
I liked the way Mike Sager made his non fiction seem like fiction. Really enjoyed his style of writing and liked to read about people I didn't know anything about (besides Rob Lowe!).
Compilation of journalist Mike Sager's in-depth articles about some of the seamier cases he has reported on over the years. Well written, it covers topics that may be disturbing to some.
A wonderful anthology concerning the other side of stories about people we all have heard about but, didn't know much more about than their name and scandal.