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Loading... Sleeping Where I Fall: A Chronicleby Peter Coyote
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. An insider's analysis of the 60s counterculture with perspectives gained 25-year's later. While Coyote sometimes seems more politic than heartfelt in his self-denegration, he strikes a thought-provoking balance in observing both the failures and excesses of the communards and the value of their grand vision. Tangential discussions of the arts--including the name-dropping-- also elevated the narrative for me. ( )While I am interested the the counter-culture of the 60's, and communal life I found this book to be nothing more than a self aggrandised snapshot of Mr. Coyote. I became tired of hearing him talk about himself. He never followed through with the reasons for his ideals and principles. He obviously lived a full and interesting life with some fascinating people, but should have allowed those individuals more life within the pages. After a while it got boring listening to him talk about himself. This is a great memoir of his coming of age in the '60s. We spent time at the same communes, but not together. His descriptions of communal life are spot on. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 158243011X, Paperback)As the generation that launched America's counterculture in the 1960s matures into its gray ponytails and 401(k) plans, one might expect the autobiographies of its celebrities to be tinged with apology for goals unrealized. Indeed, with only a few notable exceptions, such as Peter Fonda's Don't Tell Dad, most celebrity autobiographies from '60s pop culture icons seem rooted in either bitterness or desperation. Fortunately, in Sleeping Where I Fall, Peter Coyote neither apologizes for his wild days nor waxes romantic for them. Nor should he.This wise and witty, tightly crafted narrative reports on the turbulence of that era with philosophical integrity, wry humor, and unmitigated honesty. Looking back over his days with the San Francisco Mime Troupe, a street theater group that sought to break the conventional boundaries between performer and audience, Coyote rhapsodizes with equal vigor about the company's artistic triumphs and the pulchritude of its actresses. While his developing acting career and romantic misadventures comprise a great deal of the narrative, an even larger part dwells on his life as one of The Diggers, the band of anarchistic counterculturalists who fought against commercial culture's ability to co-opt the superficial elements of youthful rebellion by rejecting the very notions of ownership and extrinsic value. "The Diggers," writes Coyote, "understood that style is infinitely co-optable. What could not be co-opted was doing things for free-without money." And what things they did! Coyote recounts the lives and times of poets, actors, farmers, and philosophers who participated in a profound cultural experiment that tested the very limits of human consciousness and fell--eventually--to the excesses of personal indulgence. Coyote's evolution from callow thespian to revolutionary communard to seasoned philosopher is fascinating, as much a social and political history as it is a reminiscence. The stories unravel like tender after-dinner tales in prose that captures the rasp and tickle of Coyote's corduroy voice. In the end, Sleeping Where I Fall reveals a man as complex and unpredictable as the totem animal from which he takes his name. --L.A. Smith (retrieved from Amazon Wed, 06 Jan 2010 13:24:05 -0500) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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