HST's suicide leaves me feeling gut-punched. Oddly, not really *surprised*--I never saw him expiring peacefully in bed, or anything. But shocked, and kind of old and emptied out, and deeply sad.
I'd say Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, which is pretty much quintuple-distilled essence of HST. (Do *not* watch the movie first--in fact, I'd say [unless you are a fanatic Johnny Depp completist] do not watch the movie ever, because it's pretty terrible.) Alternatively, The Great Shark Hunt is a collection of shorter pieces, and while it doesn't have the sustained, cumulative brutal frenzy of F&LinLV, it does have his short piece on the Kentucky Derby, which is a classic.
My favorite work of Thompson's is actually Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail, but it's going to be much less accessible for someone who doesn't have a good working knowledge of the American political scene circa 1972. *g*
I disagree about the film, offhand; it's got its problems, but I think it gets a lot of the rhythm of the language and I like the way it ultimately takes responsibility for its own excesses.
Re: Hunter S. Thompson
Date: 2005-02-22 12:21 pm (UTC)My favorite work of Thompson's is actually Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail, but it's going to be much less accessible for someone who doesn't have a good working knowledge of the American political scene circa 1972. *g*
Re: Hunter S. Thompson
Date: 2005-02-22 11:43 pm (UTC)