Tom Wolfe-Fashionista Of
His Own Kind-And A Hell Of A Writer When The Deal Went Down Has Cashed His
Check
By Bart Webber
I had been, strangely
enough, in La Jolla out in California attending yet another writers’ conference
which seems to be the makings of my days these days, attending writers’
conferences that is instead of taking pen to paper or rather fingers to word
processor keyboard, when I heard Tom Wolfe had cashed his check. “Cashed his
check” a term (along with synonymous “cashed his ticket”) grabbed from memory
bank as a term used when I was “on the bum” hanging out in hobo jungle camps
and the whole trail of flop houses and Salvation Army digs to signify that a
kindred had passed to the great beyond. Was now resting in some better place
that a stinking stew-bitten, flea –bitten, foul-aired and foul-person place. No
more worries about the next flop, the next jug of cheapjack wine, the next
run-in with vicious coppers and railroad bulls, and the next guy who was ready
to rip whatever you had off to feed his own sullen addiction.
By the way this is not
Thomas Wolfe of You Can’t Go Home Again,
Look Homeward, Angels, etc. but the
writer, maybe journalist is a better way to put the matter of tons of
interesting stuff from acid trips in the 1960s hanging with Ken Kesey and his
various tribes of merry pranksters, the Hell’s Angels, drifters, grifters and
midnight sifters, to marveled space flights in the 1970s to Wall Street in the
reckless 1980 and back who had cashed his check. The strange part of the
“strangely enough” mentioned above was that on Monday May 14th 2018,
the day he died, I was walking along La Jolla Cove and commenting to my
companion without knowing his fate that Tom Wolfe had made the La Jolla surfing
scene in the early 1960s come alive with his tale of the Pump House Gang and
related stories about the restless California tribes, you know those Hell’s
Angels, Valley hot-rod freaks and the like who parents had migrated west from dustbowl
Okies and Arkies to start a new life out in Eden. These next generation though
lost in a thousand angsts and alienation not having to fight for every breath
of fresh air (with the exception of the Angels who might as well have stayed in
the Okies and McAllister Prison which would have been their fate.
I don’t know how Tom
Wolfe did at the end as a writer, or toward the end, when things seemed to
glaze over and became very homogenized, lacked the verve of hard ass 1960s,
1970s, and 1980s times. Although I do note that he did a very although I note
he did an interesting take on the cultural life at the Army base at Fort Bragg
down in North Carolina in a book of essays around the theme of hooking up. That
hooking up angle a sign that social cohesiveness in the age of the Internet was
creating some strange rituals. Know this those pound for pound in his prime he along
with Hunter Thompson could write the sociology of the land with simple flair
and kept this guy, me, flipping the pages in the wee hours of the morning. RIP,
Tom Wolfe, RIP.
The 50th Anniversary Of The Summer Of Love-A Random Word … On The Late Hunter S. Thompson-Doctor Gonzo
Zack James’ comment:
You know it is in a way too bad that “Doctor Gonzo”-Hunter S Thompson, the late legendary journalist is not with us in these times both this 50th anniversary commemoration of the Summer of Love, 1967 which he worked the edges of while he was doing research (live and in your face research by the way) on the notorious Hell’s Angels. His “hook” through Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters down in Kesey’s place in La Honda where many an “acid test” took place and where for a time the Angels, Hunter in tow, were welcomed. He had been there and later as well when he saw the ebb tide of the 1960s coming a year or so later. He would have “dug” the exhibition at the de Young Museum at the Golden Gate Park highlighting the events of the period.
Better yet he would have had this Trump thug wrapped up and
bleeding from all pores just like he regaled us with the tales from the White
House bunker back in the days when Trump’s kindred one Richard Milhous Nixon,
President of the United States and common criminal was running the same low
rent trip before he was run out of town by his own like some rabid rat. Hunter
Thompson wherever you are –help. Selah. Enough said-for now
Make no mistake the late,
lamented Hunter Thompson was always something of a muse for me going way back
to the early 1970’s when I first read his seminal work on the outlaw bikers, Hell’s
Angels. Since then I have devoured, and re-devoured virtually everything that
he has written. I have reviewed many of those efforts elsewhere in this space.
As I noted recently in reviewing his 2004 work Hey, Rube not all his efforts
have been equally compelling. That was the case in panning Hey, Rube but here
we are on much more solid tradition ‘gonzo’ style from the old days. Maybe it
is because this work is in the form of a memoir and thus intentionally places
the good Doc’s actions in the center of the writing that makes this more in the
mold of his better compilations like the Great Shark Hunt and Songs of the
Doomed.
Thompson uses a stream of
consciousness trope going from the present (early 2000’s) and his then current
doings and splices them together, in some segments randomly, to events as far
back as his childhood in Louisville, Kentucky. Along the way we find out him at
age nine in trouble with the FBI. Down and dirty in Rio with the crazies.
Incessantly testing his beloved guns and various hot motorcycles at various and
sundry appropriate and inappropriate times. Taking trips to places like Vietnam
just before the fall, Cuba, Grenada after the invasion and elsewhere where the
journalistic action might be and a story, in the Thompson style, might develop.
Needless to say there is plenty of ink about sex, drug and rock and rock
including his deeply affecting and traumatic tangle with the law in the early
1990’s. That, my friends, was a close call. And throughout, as usual, there are
pithy political comments about the various idiots-in-chiefs and their henchman
that he spent his life hammering. Maybe not your way, definitely not my way but
his way. His fateful run for Sheriff of Aspen on the Freak Power ticket in 1970
probably set the tone of his politics accurately. For those who have read other
works by Thompson some of the signature language may be old hat as he meanders
along in this volume. For others it is a chance to learn the lingo. Enough
said.
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