Ken Kesey: A Short History, Part IV

k1.jpg (Photo: Novelist Ken Kesey with what looks like the redwoods behind him).

Several round-trip adventures from La Honda to New York followed and the remarkable school bus was immediately recognized in cities and towns across the nation.

On one trip, the Pranksters shot 40 hours of film for a movie called “Intrepid Traveler and the Merry Band of Pranksters Look for a Cool Place.” (Where is that film today? Let’s get up on youtube!).

When Ken Kesey and the Pranksters returned to their home base in La Honda to edit the film, it became evident that the lcoals were greatly disturbed by their new neighbors. There were reports of unfriendly rifle shots breaking the still of night and bullet holes in Kesey’s mailbox (which stood beside the road).

Many La Hondanas in those days were conservative anti-social types who never wanted to understand Kesey. They were suspicious of this counterculture hero. Perhaps they had good reason to be wary when Kesey invited the Hell’s Angels to La Honda for a party. The never low-key Kesey publicized the event to the dismay of locals by posting a sign on his gate that read, “Welcome Hell’s Angels.”

(Actually that was pretty funny).

…To be continued…

Ken Kesey: A Short History, Part III

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“One Flew Over The Cuckoo Nest” Author bought a 1939 International Harvester school bus, already equipped with bunk beds, benches and a refrigerator. It was christened with a new destination sign that read, “FURTHER.”

At the wheel of the bus was Neal Cassady, the real-life hero of Jack Kerouac’s beat generation novel “On The Road.”

Can you imagine that? How cool….Authentic individuals, ok, wild and crazy but not cookie-cutter people…

Kesey’s first project for the “Pranksters” was to decorate the bus and it turned out to be a never-ending process, with sprayed-on yellow, blue and orange Day-Glo paint. Did they do it at the La Honda property? I don’t know. I hope so. I saw that cabin from the twisty-turney road once; the cabin was located at an “elbow” in the road–I think Kesey and his family had moved to Oregon by then–but empty or not the cabin still held great fascination for me…We had been exploring an old apple farm and enjoyed the trek to an incredible water fall….La Honda had it all…

Neal Cassady’s nickname was “Speed Limit” and he revved up the spray painted bus. It was a beautiful bus. Who wouldn’t want to get on board?

…To Be Continued…

Ken Kesey: A Short History, Part II

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Embraced by literary critics, “One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest” was viewed as a microcosm of the wider world–where power is often abused–and the individual is suppressed for the sake of conformity. “Cukoo’s Nest” soon became a Broadway play and later an Academy Award-winning film starring Jack Nicholson.

Although Kesey’s second book, “Sometimes A Great Notion,” a lengthy saga about a logging family, won some acclaim, it faile to ignite the literary excitement of “Cuckoo’s Nest.” It was “Cuckoo’s Nest” that brought Ken Kesey fame and a modest fortuna via royalties. Seeking creative isolation, he purchased a mountain hideaway, a rustic log and stone cabin on 2 1/2 acres surrounded by a majestic grove of redwood trees in La Honda in San Mateo County.

Amid scenery that looked like a Christams card, Kesey emerged as a leader of the psychedelic movement, on the cutting edge of “acid tests,” long hair and Eastern mysticism. He was at the center of the counterculture scene emerging in San Mateo County and the young people who flocked tohis side at La Honda were dubbed “The Merry Pranksters.”

They “goofed off,” smoked pot and listened to live rock n’ roll, much of it provided by a musical group that later became world famous as the Grateful Dead.

…To be continued…

Ken Kesey: A Short History, Part I

k1.jpg(Photo: Novelist Ken Kesey)

Counterculture hero Ken Kesey went all out researching his first and highly acclaimed novel, “One Flew Over The Cukoo’s Nest.”

Published in 1962, “Cukoo’s Nest” earned favorable reviews for its bitingly satiric look at a mental hospital where the inmates as well as their keepers wrestled with reality.

Collecting material for the book commenced after Kesey completed a year long creative writing course on a Woodrow Wilson scholarship at Stanford University in the 1950s. A friend told the aspiring novelist that the Veterans Hospital in Menlo Park needed “paid” volunteers for experiments they were conducting on the effects of LSD and other hallucinogens. Kesey signed up, and when the program ended, he took a job as a night attendant in the hospital’s mental ward.

When Kesey quit that job, he walked away with all the ingredients for an extraordinary novel. He had observed a mental ward up close, got to know the patients and even ingested mind-altering drugs.

…To be continued…

Ken Kesey’s Long Lasting Effect

I still vividly remember getting my copy of “One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest”. I was a kid living with my parents in San Francisco’s Sunset District. Back then I did all of my reading at the library. But I knew there was one bookstore with big glass windows on Irving Street. I could see the books inside but I had never bought one.

My father– who had always wanted to be a writer– subscribed to Newsweek and read a review of Ken Kesey’s blockbuster. Without telling me ordered a copy from the bookstore on Irving Street. Can you believe it? This great book had to be ordered in those days!

That was back in the early 1960s and all these years I have kept my copy of Kesey’s book.

She Liked My Cat Video

sami.jpg (Photo: Sami, my boy cat)

I forgot to tell you that a while back I received a delightful email from Joni Mueller:

“June,” she wrote, “why did you remove Sami’s video [from youtube]? I wanted to share it with a friend who just recently lost her kitty. It was the most precious thing.”

Joni (fellow cat lover)
————
“Joni,” I wrote, “Thank you for remembering Sami’s video. I just uploaded it again
to youtube–here’s the link:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uPTl7AX61us
Thank you for remembering. So sweet.”
——————-
“June,” she wrote, “He is a precious cat and what makes the video so sweet, to me anyway, is the little chirps of happiness and the interaction with you; he seems like a loving cat. And it’s that same cute noise they make when you touch them while they are fast asleep, a million miles beneath their brains.
Thanks for re-uploading, I’ll let my friend know!
Joni
——

Joni has a website called “Joni’s Universe.” Here’s the link:
http://www.joniverse.com/

She also has a business design website with Ivan Minic which looks pretty good. it’s called Pixelita Designs and here’s the link: http://www.pixelita.com/

Be adventurous…Check out Joni’s sites.

World’s Fastest Indian—With Anthony Hopkins…

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Burt and I watched the “World’s Fastest Indian” on HDNET the other night. Wow, great movie, starring Anthony Hopkins who never wavers from his role as a single-minded, elderly New Zealander with a heart problem who has never left the little town where he lives on little money– but is loved by one and all– as he constantly works on his motor-cycle– an old Indian model, that he revs up with anything he can find, like used wine corks. His goal is to race the motor-cycle at the salt flats in Utah and break all world records. Unusual and upbeat.