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A piercing vision into the why of every group in the motorcycle gang scare of the sixties: outlaws and squares and cops.
| Recommendation: Purchase | |
| Writer: Hunter S. Thompson | |
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Rating: 7 |
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Subtitled The Strange and Terrible Saga of the Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs, Thompson covers the Oakland chapter from the Labor Day run of 1964 to Christmas of 1965. This was the book that gave Hunter S. Thompson his big break. Except for the choice of subject matter it is mild and sedate compared to just about everything hes written since. It is still, however, a fine piece of work, showing not only a talent for description of the odd but also a piercing vision into the why of every group in the saga: outlaws and squares and cops. I suspect it is this book above all others that causes some bookstores to shelve Thompsons works in the sociology section.
If youre interested in motorcycle gangs, or if you just want a look at the bottom end of the American Dream, you shouldnt miss Hells Angels.
If youre a fan of Tom Wolfe, youll also find Hells Angels interesting because a few chapters cover the same events that happen with the Hells Angels in The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.
In the early sixties, motorcycle gangs--especially the Hells Angels--were big news. Staid, middle-class America was scared out of their wits by the thought of these raping, pillaging barbarians spreading outside of California and into the heartland. At the start of the book, Thompson quotes from Time--evidently the same bastion of unique statistics and sensationalism that they are today--an article which ends with To that, thousands of Californians shuddered a grateful amen.
No doubt there was some shuddering done in California that week, but not all of it was rooted in feelings of gratitude. The Hells Angels shuddered with perverse laughter at the swill that had been written about them. Other outlaws shuddered with envy at the Angels sudden fame. Cops all over California shuddered with nervous glee at the prospect of their next well-publicized run-in with any group of motorcyclists. And some people shuddered at the realization that Time had 3,042,092 readers.
If the Hells Angels of the late sixties were a product of anything, it was the press coverage that they received in the mid-sixties, and the sensationalist journalism of magazines such as Time and Newsweek.
Few people would have had the balls to hang out repeatedly with the vilified and extreme Hells Angels and write about them while doing it; fewer still would have had the state of mind to stay alive and basically unharmed. Even Thompson has his run-in with the Angels when hes in the wrong place at the wrong time.
The Hells Angels scare of the mid-sixties is an almost typical example of how mainstream society was reacting to the sixties. If you dont understand it, be frightened of it; stamp it out. Spend lots and lots of money getting law enforcement on it right away. And make sure theres lots of press coverage. Hells Angels is as much a case study of the mainstream and of the press as it is of the Hells Angels. How individuals reacted to the Angels; how towns and cities reacted; how state committees studied them; and how the media chose which parts to report on, which parts to ignore, and which parts to just plain make up, is a fascinating study not of the world of the Angels, but of our own world. To a very large extent, we still live in the world that Hunter was reporting on, and the news media still react in the same way to things they dont understand.
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Search for more items by Hunter S. Thompson
Sonny Barger, an American Legend
A whole lot of information about Sonny Barger--one of the main Angels in Hells Angels, and about his book and upcoming movie.
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