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6 Reviews
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pure Brautigan, undoubtedly one of his wisest works
Short stories loosely grouped to form a novel about the time Brautigan spent traveling back and forth between, as the title implies, Tokyo and Montana, this stands as one of the author's best, and undeservedly underrated works. Chapters such as "Old Man Working in the Rain" and "Very Good Dead Friends" will leave Brautigan fans, as well as those just...
Published on July 18, 1998 by Gregory Miller

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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Brautigan's travel diary an intriguing waste of time
For most people, the idea of reading a 250 page book about travelling between Tokyo and Montana, (which Brautigan did for many years before hs death) is about as interesting as wallpaper. Fortunately, this is Richard Brautigan, and his wallpaper is like none you've ever seen. He wanders around, noting mostly sad scenes about the world around him, (like the one about his...
Published on June 20, 1997


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pure Brautigan, undoubtedly one of his wisest works, July 18, 1998
Short stories loosely grouped to form a novel about the time Brautigan spent traveling back and forth between, as the title implies, Tokyo and Montana, this stands as one of the author's best, and undeservedly underrated works. Chapters such as "Old Man Working in the Rain" and "Very Good Dead Friends" will leave Brautigan fans, as well as those just getting to know his work, breathless with emotion. A work that in some places containts evidence of Brautigan's growing depression and dissatisfaction with life as age sets in, it is also one of his most personal, mature, and reflective creations. It is well worth searching for, but unfortunately hard to find.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars you'll know when you've found one of these stations, December 8, 1997
By A Customer
if you picked up this book because you've read brautigan before, skip this review, you don't need it. However, if you have no clue as to who could this guy envisioning an express between Tokyo and Montana, and you also think its a futile, impossible task, you're in for quite a treat. This book unfolds like an artichoke's flower, bursting out in strange but remarkably possible colors. Brautigan was someone who felt he had to write, you can tell by how he treats his words, with the utmost care and flippant caresses: How to explain an earthquake to a retarded child? try telling him wind is blowing through the ground, page whatever. Need i say more? Probably, but the pleasure is in discovery, not recognition.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Photos From The Inside of a Brain, September 20, 2010
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this novel/collection of flash fiction is so fresh, timely and unpredictable as it was when it was first printed. Every page rereadable. A must try. A must have.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Brautigan's travel diary an intriguing waste of time, June 20, 1997
By A Customer
For most people, the idea of reading a 250 page book about travelling between Tokyo and Montana, (which Brautigan did for many years before hs death) is about as interesting as wallpaper. Fortunately, this is Richard Brautigan, and his wallpaper is like none you've ever seen. He wanders around, noting mostly sad scenes about the world around him, (like the one about his favorite chinese restaurant. He writes with such pathos that you feel sad and angry when it closes) though this world view can be compared to his mindset at the time; Brautigan took his own life just a few years later. For Brautigan fans, this will provide necessary insight into a normally distant personality. For everybody else, it will grow very tedious after awhile. Interesting idea, but the very concept wears thin quickly
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Brautigan's travel diary an intriguing waste of time, June 23, 1997
By A Customer
For most people, the idea of reading a 250 page book about travelling between Tokyo and Montana, (which Brautigan did for many years before hs death) is about as interesting as wallpaper. Fortunately, this is Richard Brautigan, and his wallpaper is like none you've ever seen. He wanders around, noting mostly sad scenes about the world around him, (like the one about his favorite chinese restaurant. He writes with such pathos that you feel sad and angry when it closes) though this world view can be compared to his mindset at the time; Brautigan took his own life just a few years later. For Brautigan fans, this will provide necessary insight into a normally distant personality. For everybody else, it will grow very tedious after awhile. Interesting idea, but the very concept wears thin quickly
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1 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars TOMBSTONES WEARY, November 7, 2003
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he stumbles around the corner ,the LATE EARLY TOO LATE, MORNING AFTER,musses a near blur and releases some{ NUGGETS] HIDDEN WITHIN THE DRISSLE far,off from even least BEST , his one joke story SORRY STONED monologues OF himself in despair.
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Tokyo-Montana Express (Picador Books)
Tokyo-Montana Express (Picador Books) by Richard Brautigan (Paperback - July 9, 1982)
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