A biography of William S. Burroughs, one of the beat writers. He was a scion of the Burroughs family of computer fame, a lifelong heroin addict, lover of cats, gay, and writer of very provocative literature. He was one of the Beat writers with Kerouac and Ginsberg. Later he hung out with the Andy Warhol Factory. He wrote Naked Lunch and Soft Machine--two of the most difficult books I have read in my life. One of the tricks he used in writing was a "cut-up" technique. He would write sections on notebook cards and randomly select them and put that section in his story. You can see some of this in Soft Machine, where essentially the same sections keep repeating over and over again.
The biography was a little weird, not like a conventional book. The paper was a heavy bond, every page was coloured, not much white space. There were lots of pictures and sometimes the text would go right over the pictures. There were small sections that were virtually unreadable. Overall, I liked the book, but still find Burroughs, while interesting, a little repellent.