Other than perhaps PJ O'Rourke or David Horowitz, there's no eulogy of Hunter S. Thompson I'd rather read than Tom Wolfe. Opinionjournal has it online today.
"Hunter's life, like his work, was one long barbaric yawp, to use Whitman's term, of the drug-fueled freedom from and mockery of all conventional proprieties that began in the 1960s. In that enterprise Hunter was something entirely new, something unique in our literary history. When I included an excerpt from "The Hell's Angels" in a 1973 anthology called "The New Journalism," he said he wasn't part of anybody's group. He wrote "gonzo." He was sui generis. And that he was.Posted by Discoshaman at février 23, 2005 12:47 AM | TrackBackYet he was also part of a century-old tradition in American letters, the tradition of Mark Twain, Artemus Ward and Petroleum V. Nasby, comic writers who mined the human comedy of a new chapter in the history of the West, namely, the American story, and wrote in a form that was part journalism and part personal memoir admixed with powers of wild invention, and wilder rhetoric inspired by the bizarre exuberance of a young civilization."
Good article.
Posted by: Paul Baxter at février 23, 2005 04:53 PMThere will never be another H.S.T.
Godspeed, you nutjob.
Posted by: Loving Fear and Loathing at février 24, 2005 10:05 PM