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Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

50th Anniversary Edition - With an introduction by Caity Weaver, acclaimed New York Times journalist This cult classic of gonzo journalism is the best chronicle of drug-soaked, addle-brained,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

8 ratings

Buy the ticket, take the ride! -Thompson circa ‘71-

Next to Jack Kerouac Hunter S Thompson parentheses Raul Duke. Is my favorite author. There’s a few others that I really really like but these to stand out to me in ways that I cannot articulate. Johnny Depp and Bill Murray both did well in regards to being a Hunter Thompson. Bill Murray and Where The Buffalo Roam and Johnny Depp in the movie of the books namesake. The world knew Hunter Thompson was special. With his book of the bio pic of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club. Any of his books will be phenomenal on your shelf. This is the most iconic. Next to Fear and Loathing on The Campaign Trail ‘72.

"Buy the ticket, take the ride"

One of my favorite books! "What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas" comes to my mind when I think about this book. A great introduction to gonzo journalism and HST.

Definitely Interesting

Definitely an interesting rollercoaster of a book. Would likely read again.

Incredible book

Favorite movie, one of my favorite books.

Rah Rah

The previous reviewer is what one may call a "gotard." He feels that fear and loathing is only about drugs. He is simple minded, and can't see what is really occuring in one of the finest American novels of the later half of the 20th century. Fear and loathing in las vegas is about the search for the long lost American Dream. It is story about two men set out to find the American Dream, and they use drugs and excess as means for getting there.

"only for those with true grit-and we are chock full of it"

I have read and re-read my copy of this book so many times the pages are all dog eared and the spine is on the verge of coming apart. In short this book is an absolute masterpiece. I don't think that there is any other book that will completely hold you in it's grip from the first to the last line in the way that this book will.This book and it's author have became cultural icons ever since it went to print in the early seventies. Plenty of other reviewers have gone into great detail about many of the notable qualities of this book: the hilarious dark humor of the two's drug induced antics and the razor sharp wit it is written with, the clarity in descriptions of the drug state, the spot on observations of the 'American way of life' as well as the counterculture of the '60s, the brutal honesty in which the author deals with negative and reckless acts commited by him and especially his attorny (which some find disturbing) and of course the shear genius in every page of this by all means flawless novel.After reading this book too many times to keep count, although I still find it totally laugh out loud funny, I generally must say that Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas is ultimately a sad novel. Sure it's a road trip to cover a story in Las Vegas on hallucinogens, but I feel that overall it is the cronicle of a 'failed seeker'. I mean the search for the American Dream is unsuccessfull and you get the feeling from this book that it will always be an unfruitfull search as the American dream doesn't exist. The passages on how the energy of the '60s dissappeared are particularly moving in this way.I cannot recomend reading this book enough, it is funny, witty, paranoid, dreamy yet crystal clear and written impecably well."Buy the ticket, take the ride"

The Best American Comedy of the 20th Century?

This hilarious satire is fast paced, very entertaining even after multiple readings, and a hysterically funny yet scathing portrayal of American society and the city of Las Vegas in the early 1970s.Thomson admired the previous generation of American writers such as Hemingway and Fitzgerald and the polished craft of his writing style reflects this. In 200 pages there isn't a single bad sentence, or a miscued punchline. Vast amounts of hard (sober) work (and talent) must have gone into perfecting a deceptively conversational, light style.For "serious" readers, this book can also be read as a coda to the late 1960s social revolution. By the early 1970s, its apparent to Thompson that the dream is dead, a pre-Watergate Richard Nixon is in the White House, and the silent majority are satisfied and complacent.My title for this review is quite deliberate - this is the best American comedy of the 20th Century, and it will be read and enjoyed 100 years hence.

More truer now than it was originally!

I personally live just outside of Las Vegas, and just about everything the good doctor wrote about is still true (especially Circus Circus). I can only imagine what he'd think of the quasi-Disneyland attractions that are there now.The drug content was to be expected at that era. The world was still in a white picket fence mode and "creative chemistry" was seen as a tool to escape from it (or at least, take a different view).The stream-of-consciousness writing style is a wonder to behold. You can practically feel your mind bob-sledding through the ether-induced haze, coming to a landing on both feet. As for weither or not it was real, get over it. Just wallow in the genius of the work; how it dissects the "American Dream" and how we were so rudely woken from it.And if you've seen the film, READ THE FREAKIN' BOOK AS WELL! You will discover a favorite quote or two that you'll find yourself using over and over again. I laughed so hard reading it the first time, my face hurt!It's a classic document of the tail end of the "flower power" generation, and the beginning of the narcisism of the 1970's. Classic American literature with sheer outright BALLS that's so dearly lacking in today's pop culture.I am certain that when Dr. Thompson reaches his final reward, he will have a never-ending orgy held in his honor, just for writing this book.

Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream Mentions in Our Blog

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Published by Ashly Moore Sheldon • January 06, 2022
It’s always fun to commemorate literature that withstands the test of time. And 1972 was a big year for noteworthy reads. Here are ten memorable books, for all ages, marking the big 5-0 this year and some notes on their significance.
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Published by Theia Griffin • March 22, 2021

A group of writers never fail to capture my interest. They fall within a specific genre of writers now loosely deemed literary nonfiction essayists, journalists, and authors that Tom Wolfe called "The New Journalists" like Joan Didion, Hunter S. Thompson, Truman Capote, and more. Read more to learn about what that means and why it's such a special genre all its own.

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Published by Ashly Moore Sheldon • August 07, 2020

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