10 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Like, wow, Sugar Cubie!, April 24, 2006
This review is from: Hippie Trip (Pelican) (Mass Market Paperback)
My my my how times change. Lewis Yablonsky's interviews and interactions (including at least one acid trip) with hippies in 1967 and 1968 make up a fascinating collection of moments, ideas and what we would now call teen angst/grunge philosophy. The book is the more interesting because it is so severely dated (and probably was by six months after its first printing). Not embarrassingly naive but pretty pie-eyed, Yablonsky's unquestioning acceptance of all the things the hippies told him makes this an entertaining period piece.
Especially interesting to me are is the total lack of references to homosexuality (still a very taboo subject in the brave new world of 1967) and the abject, almost Zen-like acceptance of "doing your own thing", whether that be your own bad trip or your own good trip or just about anything in between.
As a former Deadhead/acid user/freethinker/hippie myself I found the book very readable but not very informative. What I walked away with was a bemused feeling of how different our society is in some ways than it was in 1967.
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