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I looked around and people's faces were distorted...lights were
flashing everywhere...the screen at the end of the room had three
or four different films on it at once, and the strobe light was
flashing faster than it had been...the band was playing but I
couldn't hear the music...people were dancing...someone came up to
me and I shut my eyes and with a machine he projected images on the
back of my eye-lids...I sought out a person I trusted and he
laughed and told me that the Kool-Aid had been spiked and that I
was beginning my first LSD experience...
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Rockridge (Hardcover)
Robin Wolf, Tom Wolf
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R719
R638
Discovery Miles 6 380
Save R81 (11%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Tom Wolfe introduces a wide range of journalistic reportage by writers including Truman Capote, Terry Southern, George Plimpton, Norman Mailer and Hunter S. Thompson.
A wonderful novel and perfect book club choice, The Right Stuff is
a wildly vivid and entertaining chronicle of America's early space
programme. WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY US ASTRONAUT SCOTT KELLY 'What
is it,' asks Tom Wolfe, 'that makes a man willing to sit on top of
an enormous Roman Candle...and wait for someone to light the fuse?'
Arrogance? Stupidity? Courage? Or, simply, that quality we call
'the right stuff'? A monument to the men who battled to beat the
Russians into space, The Right Stuff is a voyage into the mythology
of the American space programme, and a dizzying dive into the
sweat, fear, beauty and danger of being on the white-hot edge of
history in the making. 'Tom Wolfe at his very best... Learned,
cheeky, risky, touching, tough, compassionate, nostalgic,
worshipful, jingoistic...The Right Stuff is superb' New York Times
Book Review
The magazine that is the city that is the world
Just in time for its fortieth anniversary, "New York" magazine
presents a stunning collection of some of its best and most
influential articles, stories that captured the spectacle, the
turbulence, and the cultural realignments of the past four decades.
Covering subjects from "Radical Chic" to Gawker.com, written by
some of the country's most renowned authors, here are works that
broke news, perfectly captured the moment, or set trends in motion.
In "New York Stories," Gloria Steinem (whose "Ms. Magazine" was
introduced in "New York") broaches the subject of women's
liberation; Tom Wolfe coins "The Me Decade"; and Steve Fishman
piercingly portrays the unwanted martyrdom of the 9/11 widows.
Cutting edge features that invented terms like "brat pack" and
"grup"; profiles of defining cultural figures including Joe Namath,
Truman Capote, and long-shot presidential candidate Bill Clinton;
and reports that inspired the acclaimed movies "Saturday Night
Fever, GoodFellas," and "Grey Gardens"-all are included in this
one-of-a-kind compilation.
The writers who chronicled the times that began with Nixon's
campaign and end with Obama's are at their best in "New York
Stories." It's an irresistible anthology from a magazine that, like
the city itself, is still making stars, setting standards, and
going strong.
Simple Pleasures presents the first major critical assessment of
works by the artist Doris Lee (1904-1983). Lee was one of the most
recognized artists in America during the 1930s and 40s, and was a
leading figure in the Woodstock Artist's Colony. Her oeuvre reveals
a remarkable ability to merge the reduction of abstraction with the
appeal of the everyday. In so doing, she offers one of the very
rare examples of a coherent visual identity that successfully
bridged the various artistic "camps" that formed with the shift in
the art world in the post-World War II era.Doris Lee exploded onto
the national scene in 1935 when her painting Thanksgiving was
awarded the Art Institute of Chicago's Logan Prize and instigated
the Sanity in Art movement in protest. Two years later, her
painting Catastrophe was purchased by the Metropolitan Museum of
Art. Simple Pleasures explores this initial national recognition in
the 1930s within the context of American Scene painting, and traces
the artist's thematic interest in the simple objects and scenes of
the everyday through her career. It also examines the influence of
the rise in abstraction during the late 1940s and 1950s, and the
particular way in which this abstraction found resonance with Lee's
long-held interest in, and collections of, folk and non-western
art. During this post-war period, Lee, like many of her American
Scene colleagues, found lucrative work in the heyday of commercial
advertising. Lee's commercial commissions for patrons such as
American Tobacco Company, Life magazine, Abbott Laboratories, and
Associated American Artists are especially compelling in both their
populist accessibility and in their deceptively sophisticated
abstraction. Sixty-five works by the artist span the 1930s through
the 1960s and are comprised of paintings, drawings, prints, and
commissioned commercial designs in fabric and pottery. Included are
advertisements by companies that commissioned images from Lee, and
photographs that contextualize the artist's work within the
Woodstock artist's community.
Tom Wolfe, "America's most skillful satirist" ("The Atlantic
Monthly"), examines the strange saga of American architecture in
this sequel to "The Painted Word."
'A great journalist with a whip-like satirical prose style...
Wolfe's great gift is to make the heavy seem light and this book is
such an entertaining polemic that I read it in a day and
immediately wanted to read it again.' - Bryan Appleyard, Sunday
Times Tom Wolfe, whose legend began in journalism, takes us on an
eye-opening journey through language. The Kingdom of Speech is a
paradigm-shifting argument that speech - not evolution - is
responsible for humanity's complex societies and achievements. From
Alfred Russel Wallace, the Englishman who beat Darwin to the theory
of natural selection but later renounced it, and through the
controversial work of modern-day anthropologist Daniel Everett, who
defies the current wisdom that language is hard-wired in humans,
Wolfe examines the solemn, long-faced, laugh-out-loud zig-zags of
Darwinism, old and Neo, and finds it irrelevant here in our Kingdom
of Speech.
Tom Wolfe, the master social novelist of our time, the spot-on
chronicler of all things contemporary and cultural, presents a
sensational new novel about life, love, and learning--or the lack
of it--amid today's American colleges.
Our story unfolds at fictional Dupont University: those Olympian
halls of scholarship housing the cream of America's youth, the
roseate Gothic spires and manicured lawns suffused with tradition .
. . Or so it appears to beautiful, brilliant Charlotte Simmons, a
sheltered freshman from North Carolina. But Charlotte soon learns,
to her mounting dismay, that for the upper-crust coeds of Dupont,
sex, cool, and kegs trump academic achievement every time.
As Charlotte encounters the paragons of Dupont's privileged
elite--her roommate, Beverly, a Groton-educated Brahmin in lusty
pursuit of lacrosse players; Jojo Johanssen, the only white
starting player on Dupont's godlike basketball team, whose position
is threatened by a hotshot black freshman from the projects; the
Young Turk of Saint Ray fraternity, Hoyt Thorpe, whose heady sense
of entitlement and social domination is clinched by his accidental
brawl with a bodyguard for the governor of California; and Adam
Geller, one of the Millennial Mutants who run the university's
"independent" newspaper and who consider themselves the last
bastion of intellectual endeavor on the sex-crazed, jock-obsessed
campus--she is seduced by the heady glamour of acceptance,
betraying both her values and upbringing before she grasps the
power of being different--and the exotic allure of her own
innocence.
With his trademark satirical wit and famously sharp eye for telling
detail, Wolfe draws on extensive observations at campuses across
the country to immortalize the early-21st-century college-going
experience.
The setting is Atlanta, Georgia — a racially mixed, late-century boomtown full of fresh wealth and wily politicians. The protagonist is Charles Croker, once a college football star, now a late-middle-aged Atlanta conglomerate king whose outsize ego has at last hit up against reality. Charlie has a 29,000 acre quail-shooting plantation, a young and demanding second wife, and a half-empty office complex with a staggering load of debt.
Meanwhile, Conrad Hensley, idealistic young father of two, is laid off from his job at the Croker Global Foods warehouse near Oakland and finds himself spiraling into the lower depths of the American legal system.
And back in Atlanta, when star Georgia Tech running back Fareek “the Canon” Fanon, a homegrown product of the city’s slums, is accused of date-raping the daughter of a pillar of the white establishment, upscale black lawyer Roger White II is asked to represent Fanon and help keep the city’s delicate racial balance from blowing sky-high.
Networks of illegal Asian immigrants crisscrossing the continent, daily life behind bars, shady real estate syndicates — Wolfe shows us contemporary America with all the verve, wit, and insight that have made him our most admired novelist. Charlie Croker’s deliverance from his tribulations provides an unforgettable denouement to the most widely awaited, hilarious and telling novel America has seen in ages — Tom Wolfe’s most outstanding achievement to date.
Tom Wolfe's genre-defining magical mystery tour through the 1960s
published in Vintage Classics for the first time to mark its
fiftieth anniversary. WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY JARVIS COCKER In the
summer of 1964, author Ken Kesey and his Merry Band of Pranksters
set out on an awesome social experiment like no other. Blazing
across America in their day-glo schoolbus, doped up and deep 'in
the pudding', the Pranksters' arrival on the scene - anarchic,
exuberant and LSD-infused - would turn on an entire
counter-culture, and provide Tom Wolfe with the perfect
free-wheeling subject for this, his pioneering masterpiece of New
Journalism. 'The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test is not simply the best
book on the hippies, it is the essential book...the pushing,
ballooning heart of the matter' New York Times
The Artistic Journey of Yasuo Kuniyoshi is a long-overdue study of
this complex artist's career. Born in Japan, Yasuo Kuniyoshi
(1889-1953) arrived in the United States as a teenager and studied
art in New York. Although thoroughly integrated into American life,
immigration laws prevented him from becoming an American citizen.
The early success he achieved with his distinctive modern figural
works developed into a compelling and powerful late style. This new
survey, the first full retrospective of his works since the Whitney
Show of 1948, features seventy of Kuniyoshi's best paintings and
drawings, chosen from leading public and private collections in
America and Japan. Tom Wolf is professor of art history, Bard
College, New York, and the leading Kuniyoshi scholar.
An exhilarating satire of Eighties excess that captures the
effervescent spirit of New York, from one of the greatest writers
of modern American prose Sherman McCoy is a WASP, bond trader and
self-appointed 'Master of the Universe'. He has a fashionable wife,
a Park Avenue apartment and a Southern mistress. His spectacular
fall begins the moment he is involved in a hit-and-run accident in
the Bronx. Prosecutors, newspaper hacks, politicians and clergy
close in on him, determined to bring him down. Exuberant,
scandalous and exceptionally discerning, The Bonfire of the
Vanities was Tom Wolfe's first venture into fiction and cemented
his reputation as the foremost chronicler of his age. 'The air of
New York crackles with an energy that causes the adrenalin to
pump... The feeling is perfectly reproduced in Wolfe's novel...
Electric' - Sunday Times 'The quintessential novel of The Eighties'
- The Guardian
Tom Wolfe's debut collection of essays - a brilliant, form-bending
dive into the future of America as it careened through the 1960s In
1965, Tom Wolfe dropped like a bomb onto the American literary
scene with his first book, The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake
Streamline Baby, an incandescent panorama of American
counter-culture, its dances, bouffant hairdos, customised cars and
rock concerts. Capturing the energy of the age in its portraits of
Phil Spector, Cassius Clay, Las Vegas and the Nanny Mafia - as well
as asking, why do doormen hate Volkswagens? - Wolfe's flamboyant
essay collection remains one of the great, revolutionary landmarks
of modern non-fiction. 'Journalism, it is said, is the first draft
of history. Nobody exemplifies the dictum better than Wolfe, the
cultural observer and social critic par excellence' Daily Telegraph
A dissection of greed-obsessed America a decade after The Bonfire
of the Vanities and on the cusp of the millennium, from the master
chronicler of American culture Tom Wolfe Charlie Croker, once a
fabled college football star, is now a late-middle-aged Atlanta
real estate entrepreneur-turned conglomerate king. His expansionist
ambitions and outsize ego have at last hit up against reality.
Charlie has a 28,000 acre quail shooting plantation, a young and
demanding second wife and a half-empty downtown tower with a
staggering load of debt. Wolfe shows us contemporary America with
all the verve, wit, and insight that have made him our most admired
novelist. 'Enthralling enough even to satisfy The Bonfire of the
Vanities devotees...humane and redemptive' - Sunday Times
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The Collectors (Paperback)
H. a. L. Wagner; Illustrated by Tom Wolfe; Jorge Sastre
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R270
Discovery Miles 2 700
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Life's a gamble when you live in East Town, Florida... The once
quiet beach side town along Florida's east coast has traded
seasonal tourism for year round 24/7 gambling. Games of chance have
taken hold changing the dynamic of the town even the currency. In a
town running on poker chips for currency Loan Sharks control the
winners and losers. A Shark is only as good as the Fish he collects
on. With badges from the state, John and Luis Solo are considered
two of the best collectors to ever work East Town. Now their
reputation has caught up to them as they struggle to learn who set
them up and why. It seemed like an easy collection when feared
Mexican Mafia boss King Lito calls on the brothers to collect fifty
grand on a fish. Things quickly go wrong when the fish turns up
dead and the collection is not what the brothers expect. Now pinned
between King Lito and their former employer, Boss Ducci, the
brothers hit the streets of East Town dodging hitmen and bounty
killers, until they can uncover the truth behind the set up and
escape East Town with their lives. Plus bonus Collectors Story you
can only find in print.
A big, panoramic story of the new America, as told by our master
chronicler of the way we live now.
As a police launch speeds across Miami's Biscayne Bay-with officer
Nestor Camacho on board-Tom Wolfe is off and running. Into the
feverous landscape of the city, he introduces the Cuban mayor, the
black police chief, a wanna-go-muckraking young journalist and his
Yale-marinated editor; an Anglo sex-addiction psychiatrist and his
Latina nurse by day, loin lock by night-until lately, the love of
Nestor's life; a refined, and oh-so-light-skinned young woman from
Haiti and her Creole-spouting, black-gang-banger-stylin' little
brother; a billionaire porn addict, crack dealers in the 'hoods,
"de-skilled" conceptual artists at the Miami Art Basel Fair,
"spectators" at the annual Biscayne Bay regatta looking only for
that night's orgy, yenta-heavy ex-New Yorkers at an "Active Adult"
condo, and a nest of shady Russians. Based on the same sort of
detailed, on-scene, high-energy reporting that powered Tom Wolfe's
previous bestselling novels, BACK TO BLOOD is another brilliant,
spot-on, scrupulous, and often hilarious reckoning with our times.
Discover The Power Of Purpose You've read the books, you've done
the seminars, and you've changed jobs, geography, and maybe even
churches, but you've never really made peace with your past felt
passion in the present or had purpose for your future. Identity and
Destiny - 7 Steps to a Purpose-filled Life is the missing link in
your quest for fulfillment Now you can answer the questions "Who am
I?" and "Why am I here?" By following the principles laid out in
this amazing journey of discovery, you will have the foundational
information and tools to put your life in high gear and live a life
you love. Completing the 7 Steps will help you: Know and focus your
God-given strengths, gifts, and passion. Use the events of your
past to benefit yourself and others. Gain confidence through
self-awareness and self-acceptance. Transform your relationship
with the Lord. Establish a solid plumb line for all future
decisions. Improve every aspect of your life - career, finances,
health, and relationships. FIND, KNOW and LIVE your God-given
purpose. THAT'S THE POWER OF PURPOSE With this workbook's unique
resources and user-friendly approach, you will discover God's plan
and have the tools to laser focus your future on the destiny you
were created to fulfill. Tom and Pam Wolf operate a thriving
coaching and consulting practice in Tampa, Florida. Before creating
the 7 Steps program, they enjoyed successful careers as
entrepreneurs. This personal and professional experience uniquely
equips them to create practical, step-by-step programs that aren't
just theory, but produce tangible results and improvement. As they
now follow their God-given purpose, you will often hear them say,
"Before we built people for a business, now we build people for a
life " For more information visit www.IDENTITYandDESTINY.com.
Born in a rough-and-tumble neighborhood of Dublin, John F. Timoney
moved to New York with his family in 1961. Not long after
graduating from high school in the Bronx, he entered the New York
City Police Department, quickly rising through the ranks to become
the youngest four-star chief in the history of that department.
Timoney and the rest of the command assembled under Police
Commissioner Bill Bratton implemented a number of radical
strategies, protocols, and management systems, including CompStat,
that led to historic declines in nearly every category of crime. In
1998, Mayor Ed Rendell of Philadelphia hired Timoney as police
commissioner to tackle the city's seemingly intractable violent
crime rate. Philadelphia became the great laboratory experiment:
Could the systems and policies employed in New York work elsewhere?
Under Timoney's leadership, crime declined in every major category,
especially homicide. A similar decrease not only in crime but also
in corruption marked Timoney's tenure in his next position as
police chief of Miami, a post he held from 2003 to January 2010.
Beat Cop to Top Cop: A Tale of Three Cities documents Timoney's
rise, from his days as a tough street cop in the South Bronx to his
role as police chief of Miami. This fast-moving narrative by the
man Esquire magazine named "America's Top Cop" offers a blueprint
for crime prevention through first-person accounts from the street,
detailing how big-city chiefs and their teams can tame even the
most unruly cities. Policy makers and academicians have long
embraced the view that the police could do little to affect crime
in the long term. John Timoney has devoted his career to dispelling
this notion. Beat Cop to Top Cop tells us how.
"An excellent book by a genius," said Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., of this
now classic exploration of the 1960s from the founder of new
journalism. "This is a book that will be a sharp pleasure to reread
years from now, when it will bring back, like a falcon in the sky
of memory, a whole world that is currently jetting and jazzing its
way somewhere or other."--"Newsweek"""
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