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Emmett Grogan (1942–1978)

Author of Ringolevio: A Life Played for Keeps

4+ Works 327 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Emmet Grogan

Works by Emmett Grogan

Ringolevio: A Life Played for Keeps (1972) 286 copies, 3 reviews
Final Score (1976) 30 copies
Twelve Stories (2020) 7 copies
The Murder of Fred Hampton [1971 film] (1971) — Producer — 4 copies

Associated Works

The Portable Sixties Reader (2002) — Contributor — 364 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1942
Date of death
1978-04-06
Gender
male
Organizations
Diggers
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
San Francisco, California, USA
Place of death
New York, New York, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
Is this truth and autobiography or more histrionics than history? I don't mind that Eugene "Emmett" Grogan calls himself Kenny Wisdom for this first act of this memoir any more than I care that Billy Pilgrim in Slaughterhouse-Five is not the real name of Vonnegut's comrade-in-arms Edward R. Crone, Jr. I don't know that anything is not factual here, it may all be psychologically correct. Grogan did not appear to care enough about fact checking as to filling in details like looking up the name show more of Caresse Crosby to identify the Italian village's benefactor he heard about, etc. So, maybe some things are misremembered, or whatever. Either way, this is an activist who started on the NYC streets as a ruffian and user and died there at 36 from an overdose. In between, he traveled, he co-founded The Diggers and found a place in-between Robin Hood and The Salvation Army to put his criminal inclinations and prodigious energy to work making a free frame of reference for hippies, Black Panthers, Methodists, runaways, and more to consider as a lifestyle alternative. Such prodigious energy that there was actually no more one Emmett Grogan than one Dread Pirate Roberts? This author only calls such instances frauds and does more name-calling than name-dropping: Timothy Leary was more drug pusher than prophet, Abbie Hoffman a plagiarist and Eldridge Cleaver crazy and homicidal. This is a unique journey through the 60s. Like most stories of that decade, something coalesced post-Beat that seemed beautiful full of potential while blossoming during The Summer of Love only to descend into murders, lost friendships, and substance abuse before the 70s were underway. show less
As is so often the case, my edition is not the one shown. I have a hardback published by Little, Brown and Company in 1972. For me, this is an extremely important 1st person history of little known aspects of North American underground radical history. Emmett Grogan was a major participant in founding the more recent version of the Diggers - who created free stores & free food programs. "Emmett Grogan", as a name, also eventually became a "collective identity" (aka: "multiple name") that show more predates Neoism's "Monty Cantsin". Grogan's audacity & dedication are extremely inspiring. Alas, I think he died from a heroin OD. BE WARNED! show less
Reading this now, it's endearing as hell. Waiting to see how it comes out . . .

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Statistics

Works
4
Also by
1
Members
327
Popularity
#72,481
Rating
3.9
Reviews
3
ISBNs
16
Languages
2

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