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Fear and Loathing at Rolling Stone

Fear and Loathing at Rolling Stone
The Essential Writing of Hunter S. Thompson  
Edited By: Jann Wenner
This edition: eBook, 592 pages
Availability: Available for immediate download
List Price: $12.99
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Description


The definitive collection of the king of gonzo journalism’s finest work for ROLLING STONE “Buy the ticket, take the ride,” was a favorite slogan of Hunter S. Thompson, and it pretty much defined both his work and his life. Fear and Loathing at Rolling Stone showcases the roller-coaster of a career at the magazine that was his literary home.

Jann S. Wenner, the outlaw journalist’s friend and editor for nearly thirty-five years, has assembled articles that begin with Thompson’s infamous run for sheriff of Aspen on the Freak Party ticket in 1970 and end with his final piece on the Bush-Kerry showdown of 2004. In between is Thompson’s remarkable coverage of the 1972 presidential campaign—a miracle of journalism under pressure—and plenty of attention paid to Richard Nixon, his bête noire; encounters with Muhammad Ali, Bill Clinton, and the Super Bowl; and a lengthy excerpt from his acknowledged masterpiece, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.

Woven throughout is selected correspondence between Wenner and Thompson, most of it never before published. It traces the evolution of a personal and professional relationship that helped redefine modern American journalism, and also presents Thompson through a new prism as he pursued his lifelong obsession: The life and death of the American Dream.
“A tome as varied and enthralling in its contents as Thompson’s satchel.”
-- Men’s Journal
“Glorious . . . You can witness Thompson’s development and deterioration unspool in real time.”
-- Matt Labash, The Wall Street Journal
“An American original. He hit the high notes out on the ragged edge, and thousands of us heard him above the canned din of the safe center.”
-- Los Angeles Times
“Wenner rolls out only the good stuff . . . You know what they say, If you got ’em . . . read ’em.
-- Vanity Fair
“A reminder of how . . . in the right hands words are scalpels with which to both surgically excise and slash at the culture.”
-- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“At his best he has the kind of trenchant, mordant wit of H. L. Mencken and Mark Twain.”
-- Houston Chronicle