Timothy Leary wore a lot of hats: Psychedelic Prophet, Stand Up Philosopher, Charming Rake, Rascal, and Scoundrel, International Fugitive, Political Prisoner, FBI Snitch, etc. He was a giant figure in the late 20th century, though whether he was a flash in the pan or a truly important influence in shaping our present culture is still up for debate. John Higgs poses that question this way:
”The question of the extent of Leary’s influence on modern society is a tricky one, and it does not have a short answer. There are so many different threads to follow and their reach is so diverse that you could devote a lifetime to following them. Perhaps a more interesting question to ask is what our culture would be like if there had been no Timothy Leary.”
This is far from an exhaustive biography of Leary. Its concentration is clearly on the most famous and notorious aspects of his life. His launching the psychedelic program at Harvard, and later becoming the LSD guru to the counterculture are where Higgs really starts digging into the story. But the central drama of Higgs book revolves around Leary’s arrest, trial, imprisonment, and dramatic escape from prison (with the assistance of the Weather Underground). His years as a fugitive in Algeria with Eldritch Cleaver and the Black Panthers and in Europe as a pampered ward of a notorious gunrunner continue to build the drama, and his kidnapping in Afghanistan by US agents, and subsequent crazy-ass trial back in America, build the drama to a high note. His re-imprisonment, and then working with the FBI against the counterculture bring the central drama crashing down on a sour note, before Higgs wraps up the last twenty years of his life like a footnote.
Higgs clearly liked Leary, but doesn’t give him the hero treatment. He shows the good, the bad, and the ugly of the man. At some points it felt like he retold some of Leary’s wilder and least believable stories without attaching any skepticism, but hey, they are cool stories, so why not. And he definitely records how many in the counterculture came to despise Leary after he turned snitch to avoid spending most of his life in prison, and shows that they had amble reason for it. But he gave the last word to those who still loved the man in spite of it, as put so well here in the words of Ken Kesey:
”Those who want to gnaw on his bones never knew his heart.”
And Higgs himself summed up this brilliant, quicksilver man like this:
”Timothy Leary clearly was a nut, at least in how the phrase is commonly understood. He did, after all, tell a courtroom that he was from the future. He described shooting a policeman as a holy act, and he declared that a comet would free him from jail. He was a megalomaniac, a bad father, and a shameless publicity seeker. And his attempts to make psychedelic use a permanent part of mainstream life were a failure. But this is not a good reason to dismiss him. Society needs nuts, for it is they that push back the boundaries of what is possible by imagining scenarios that normal people could never conceive of themselves.”