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The Harrad Experiment (Paperback)

~ (Author) "Six years ago, my wife Margaret and I wrote a paper for the North American Journal of Sociology, outlining a program designed to achieve sexual..." (more)
Key Phrases: extended sexual intercourse, male continence, sexual environment, Bad Max, Grove Oil, Harry Schacht (more...)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)

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  Hardcover, December 31, 1965 -- -- $14.95
  Paperback, August 31, 1990 $26.98 $26.98 $4.95

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Customers buy this book with The Harrad Experiment / Love All Summer (Sexy 70's Double Feature) DVD ~ Don Johnson

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Editorial Reviews

Product Description

A new-age 'experiment' takes place in the 1960s at Harrad College, a privately endowed and liberally run school that admits carefully selected students. This social experiment encourages premarital living arrangements and is totally committed - not mere lip-service or public-relations hype - to getting young men and women to think and act for themselves. What do they think about? Everything that interests the author, Bob Rimmer: human relations, sex, history, philosophy, anatomy, existentialism, art, music, Zen, politics - and, once more, sex. Four Harrad students record their thoughts regularly for four years. Their diaries include large chunks of college 'action', conversation, and portraits of fellow students, so the reader is swept into the lives of these young adults trying to sort out the jumbled mores of America's Sixties. Stanley Kolasukas, a bright, good-looking youth from a poor Polish family finds himself a roommate of Sheila Grove, the introspective daughter of an oil millionaire. Harry Schacht, a brilliant but ungainly medical student from an Orthodox Jewish background, lives with Beth Hillyer, a girl with enough drive to be a better doctor and enough sensuality to need many men in her life. Jack Dawes, imaginative and enthusiastic, lives with Valerie Latrobe, a dominant girl who believes she can better any man at anything. The original "Harrad Experiment" sold more than three million copies. This 25th anniversary edition includes a new epilogue describing the startling 'Harrad/Premar Solution', a fully up-to-date and annotated bibliography of books that support the daring, joyfully subversive premises outlined in Harrad, and Robert Rimmer's candid, controversial autobiography. When you have read this book, you will find yourself entertaining the question of whether a real-life Harrad Experiment could - or should - be going on somewhere today, turning out a very special group of young men and women with the potential to utterly change America's ways of living, thinking, and loving in the 21st century.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 324 pages
  • Publisher: Prometheus Books; 25 Anv edition (September 1990)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0879756233
  • ISBN-13: 978-0879756239
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #586,979 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Robert H. Rimmer
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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

The Harrad Experiment
60% buy the item featured on this page:
The Harrad Experiment 3.7 out of 5 stars (19)
$26.98
Proposition 31
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Thursday, My Love
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Thursday, My Love 5.0 out of 5 stars (1)
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19 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (19 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars "Controversial" depends on the times, I guess, July 1, 1999
By A Customer
When this book first came out in the mid 'Sixties, it could only be ordered by mail through an ad in Playboy. Three years later, I found it in stores as a Bantam paperback. Symbolic of the fact that if the Sexual Revolution had been a car, it would have had a 32-valve Northstar engine, but no ABS braking. This book was clearly aimed at the undergrad of my day, when college administrations held clear-cut in loco parentis authority, and the directors of girls' dorms were called "house mothers". You were taking a big chance going on a "panty raid" back then. In retrospect, I'm not really sure that today's way is necessarily "more enlightened". But you couldn't tell us that back then, with our hormones in overdrive! As a story, though, this one's short on credibilty. It's told through "diaries" of four students attending a privately-endowed "auxiliary college". Students still attend classes at recognized schools, but also attend Harrad's "human values" seminars, and live with a roommate of the opposite sex. One of the boys is a BMOC type whose sex appeal already gets him places--what's he doing here? His roomie is a shy rich girl with a low opinion of her own sex appeal. Then there's a school nerd who's paired off with this "prom queen" type who he'd be afraid to even say hi to back home, much less ask her out. But where are the prom queens who'll only date the football jocks? How about those jocks who only date the cheerleaders? Hel-lo? Unlike in the "Nerds" films, the socially inept don't get even, they remain an underclass. Rimmer is about as subtle as a Richter-scale quake when he implies that these kids' main problem is "society" and "the establishment". He forgets that, in the real world, young adults also have their peers to contend with. In the course of the story, he has his protagonists reading a lot of writings from philosophers and sociologists who are selectively "other-worldly" in their thinking. I think he should have also had them reading up on Japanese Moritist psychology, which among other things, teaches that it's counterproductive to obsess over a lot of "shoulds" and "oughts", and far healthier to come to terms with the world as it actually is.
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Harrad Experiment: Polyamory in action, September 26, 1997
By A Customer
I first read The Harrad Experiment in 1973. I was about to leave home for college in a few days, and I wanted something to read on the journey. That notion didn't work; I got the book home and stayed up most of the night reading it. But it did work after all; I read it again on the trip, and many times since.

Bob Rimmer's writing (in Harrad, and in his other books which I read later) was a major influence on my feelings about life and love. (Perhaps getting to me at a susceptible age helped.) Harrad taught me that (to steal the words of another writer, Robert Heinlein, whose character Lazarus Long said it better than I can) "the more you love, the more you can love" and (in Rimmer's own words) that "love is laughter, too".

Harrad isn't perfect; it is in certain ways a period piece, and Bob Rimmer has the occasional sexist moment (though remarkably few for a book that came out in 1966). But it remains the best fictional introduction to polyamory (a word that didn't even exist when Harrad was written) that I have encountered.

The 25th Anniversary Edition has an extra bonus; a short autobiography of Bob Rimmer. All fans of Rimmer's work will want to read it; it's almost worth the cost of a new book, even if you already have a dogeared copy of the old Bantam edition of The Harrad Experiment. There is also an updated bibliography/reading list, so you'll actually have a chance of being able to find the books.

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Oh I wish..., March 30, 2003
By T. Niksa (Logan, WV) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I cannot mistake it for being anything but a fantasy, but one that appeals a lot to me...women who one gets to see naked at least once a day, a roommate that you are told has been computer-assigned to you on the basis of sexual compatablily, a nice isolated New England college. Such a life - would definitely be good!

I enjoyed the heck out of this in the early seventies. While not anywhere as explicit as "Literotica" or other writings on the web, back then it was pretty hot stuff, particularly for someone who had lazy intellectual pretensions. The scene where two of our heroes/heroines have a long discussion of the history of polyamory while continuously coupled was especially pleasing.

Since then, I've grown up some; I've realized the war between advocates of prohibitions on sexual conduct, usually backed by the established religions, on the one hand, and the advocates of sexual license on the other, is never going to be won by one side or the other. Although not religious myself, I am mature enough to know that neither side is entirely right or wrong, and the advocacy of complete sexual license is often just one other strategy for guys to try and cut themselves out as big a slice of the female gene pie as possible. Heck, it sure worked for Rasputin and Charles Manson. I've also noticed the participants in the experiment are a cross-section of a '60s student body - white, middle class, without physical handicaps, and secure in their futures. Except for the young Indian girl who taken out of poverty is quickly converted to the "new American way." The earlier writer who said this reflected cultural arrogance is on the mark here.

Still, I still keep my copy around, reread it from time to time, and sure wish I could get dormed with someone like Sheila.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Dirty? nah....Tame!
Still a good laugh after 35+ years. I thought it was "dirty" when I read it as a teenager, but what the heck, I was about 14 at the time. Read more
Published on December 17, 2006 by happy philosopher

1.0 out of 5 stars Dirty book disguised as serious sociology
In the foreward, Rimmer says he'll move the world with the right kind of lever. We should be so lucky. Read the book and wink at its descriptions of casual sex. Read more
Published on May 26, 2006 by Twice-lived

4.0 out of 5 stars Sex Education for a High School Sophmore
... the book is not without merits. It's presentation of idealistic youth in a changing culture was a refreshing reminder, for a child growing up in the age of irony and cynicism,... Read more
Published on April 12, 2003 by Brian Spies

4.0 out of 5 stars Coed Dorms
I first read this book at its publication many years ago. The idea of coed dorms was not even considered then. Read more
Published on March 25, 2002 by hamrad

5.0 out of 5 stars Awakening
I read this book as a frshman in college and it really did change my perceptions on life. I found myself getting lost in the philosophy and taking a journey within myself as I... Read more
Published on February 8, 2000 by nix

5.0 out of 5 stars It was a seminal work for our era.
The tragedy of the era in which the President of the U.S. has his sex life aired to the world, is the fact that the serious authors who have had the courage tonot only describe... Read more
Published on July 30, 1999

1.0 out of 5 stars Anti-Semetic, Elitist, Euro-centric, and Badly Written!!!
I am amazed to find this piece of tripe still in print. While it was perhaps excusable that people took this book seriously in the seventies, to think that anyone regards this... Read more
Published on May 8, 1999

1.0 out of 5 stars Anti-Semetic, Elitist, Euro-centric, and Badly Written!!!
I am amazed to find this piece of tripe still in print. While it was perhaps excusable that people took this book seriously in the seventies, to think that anyone regards this... Read more
Published on May 8, 1999

1.0 out of 5 stars comedy tonight
this is one of the most poorly written books i have ever read. there is no character development, people behave in absurd ways that they never would in real life, and the... Read more
Published on April 22, 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars I had a wonderful time reading this book.
Actually my mom didn't want me to read this book. I mean, I started it and couldn't stop . You might be wondering why I said my mom didn't want me to read it well I'm 13. Read more
Published on March 30, 1999

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