Memoirs
of a Drugged-Up, Sex-Crazed Yippie takes the reader through the life of a 1970s
counter-culture drug user and free thinker. Mark Spies goes from casual pot
smoking to habitual use of pharmaceutical narcotics and cocaine. Due to the
changing sexual attitudes, Spies has several unconventional sexual encounters.
The 1970s brought us the "Woodstock generation." There was a sense of
idealism that developed at the beginning and died at the end of that decade.
Spies studies various currents of Marxism and discovers the New Communist movements
of the 1970s. Many counter-culture books focus on the 1960s, yet there are
plenty of events in the 1970s that deserve attention. Nixon's war in Vietnam
and Cambodia dominated the news and affected America's youth. Nixon's war on
drugs impacted the counter-culture life style. Then there was punk rock, disco,
casual cocaine use and revolutions braking out around the world by 1979. With
politics in the background, this book gives the reader a look at drug use and
the difficult business of drug dealing. The drugs, sexual attitudes, music and
politics made the 1970s what they were. Taken as a whole, this book will give
some insight into the people and events of the 1970s counter-culture.
Can You Pass The Acid Test?
The "acid
test" was a name for large concerts, with groups such as the Grateful
Dead, where free LSD (then legal) was available for those in attendance. The
title of this book comes from a flyer advertising one such event. But the
outbreak of LSD and marijuana in the 1960s was not the beginning of the drug
counterculture as we know it today. This book presents examples of drug use and
sex-promoting cliques around music, magazines, newspapers, clothing and other
forms of culture that countered the established norms and often brought about
the government's wrath. This book is a comprehensive look at these
counterculture trends from the 1990s back through the late 1800s. Here is a
comprehensive reference book to songs, publications and objects of art that reflected
the last century's countercultures, as well as government and mainstream press
attempts to censor them.
Paperback $24.03—click here.
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