Selected Product: | Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (Flamingo Modern Classics) Paperback Author: Hunter S. Thompson Publisher: Flamingo Release Date: July 1993 ISBN-10: 0586081321 ISBN-13: 9780586081327 Average Customer Rating: | | |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (Flamingo Modern Classics) by Hunter S. Thompson (ISBN-10: 0586081321, ISBN-13: 9780586081327). At this time we have not yet written a review for Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (Flamingo Modern Classics) by Hunter S. Thompson (ISBN-10: 0586081321, ISBN-13: 9780586081327). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Hilarious & succinctly... eccentric | Customer Rating: | | Even after reading this book an inumerable amount of times it never fails to make me laugh from cover to cover. This book guarantees you strange looks on trains as you gaffaw to yourself- which you will on reading every page. This book does include a lot of drug references, but the message is not about the drugs themselves - these are merely a vehicle for the plot to evolve and encourage the central idea of the book. However, contrary to another review found on here, this isn't a difficult read - the central theme, the pursuit of The American Dream, although explained through the mind of an eccentric drug user is clear throughout and is perfectly narrated through the use of internal dialogue. I usually read this book whist traveling and often finish it within a day. Over analyzing this book is not necessary. Most intelligent people [and probably many more who aren't] have opinions - we all do - the fact that Hunter S Thompson uses such a colourful character as a vehicle is what makes this such a great read. It's really not at all profound and that's what makes it so great. On another note, if you've seen Terry Gilliam's 1998 adaptation of this book - which, aside from a few bits missed out [you can only fit so much in a film] I cannot fault - you will love this book even more. | The high water mark... | Customer Rating: | | A crashing death-march along the blinking neon mainline of America, "Fear & Loathing..." will always be the pinnacle of Hunter S Thompson's achievements in writing. It's hard to think of any other work of fiction that has so consummately encapsulated its time and yet remained enjoyable long after it. For vicarious thrills it's almost unrivalled, and together with Ken Kesey's "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" it nails the terror of the American Dream with charm, wit and an amazing sense of pace. | look out! | Customer Rating: | | if you`re anything like me and packed your bag before finishing "on the road" then you`re unlikely to finish this before the end of an ugly bender. that aside when you finally return to normality you might find that hunter thompson wasn`t so far off the mark; the american dream is ugly and depraved and hasn`t changed yet, and we in the uk aren`t as different as we might like to think. this is an excellent book. | Hilarious, disturbing and important | Customer Rating: | Hunter Thompson twists a job covering a bike race into a search for the American dream, and the results are savage and funny. This time was one of crooks in the White House and kids in Vietnam, Charles Manson killing the hippy dream and Simon and Garfunkel dropping their hippy ditties to record 'Bookends' and bemoan the death of America. To a drug addled Raoul Duke (Thompson's alter ego) and his attourney the desert bike race becomes the last vestige of what America had lost in the twentieth century but, as they drive across the desert consuming a trunkful of chemicals, their fear takes over. Their mission (to find the American dream) becomes lost in a paranoid haze, and they recede further from their goal as they just try to keep their heads above water in the new, dreamless USA. The behaviour of the pair is incredibly funny (especially in the first half of the book), and Thompson makes Duke's world instantly make sense, even though you know it only makes sense to him (e.g. when he becomes trapped in the hotel lobby surrounded by lizards and thinks that he will not escape alive unless he can acquire some golf shoes). However, this is not just some drugged up buddy-book. It is the successor to Kerouac's 'On the Road', but with all the hope of that book extinguished. America is seedy and sordid and the gaurdians of righteousness are now fat bloated cops (like the ones from Easy Rider, as Duke points out). Freedom is carefully martialled, so the only freedom available to Duke is fast cars and dangerous drugs. The conversation with a burger joint waitress in which they decide that the American Dream was a bar a couple of blocks away that had since been knocked down is heartbreaking, and a fine finale to a glorious book. |
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