The Gang That Wouldn't Write Straight

Wolfe, Thompson, Didion, and the New Journalism Revolution

Hardcover, 336 pages

English language

Published Nov. 15, 2005 by Crown.

ISBN:
978-1-4000-4914-1
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. . . In Cold Blood, The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Slouching Towards Bethlehem, The Armies of the Night . . .Starting in 1965 and spanning a ten-year period, a group of writers including Tom Wolfe, Jimmy Breslin, Gay Talese, Hunter S. Thompson, Joan Didion, John Sack, and Michael Herr emerged and joined a few of their pioneering elders, including Truman Capote and Norman Mailer, to remake American letters. The perfect chroniclers of an age of frenzied cultural change, they were blessed with the insight that traditional tools of reporting would prove inadequate to tell the story of a nation manically hopscotching from hope to doom and back again--from war to rock, assassination to drugs, hippies to Yippies, Kennedy to the dark lord Nixon. Traditional just-the-facts reporting simply couldn't provide a neat and symmetrical order to this chaos.Marc Weingarten has interviewed many of the …

4 editions

Subjects

  • Language
  • Reportage literature, American
  • History and criticism
  • 20th Century American Prose
  • American Journalism
  • Language Arts & Disciplines
  • Language Arts / Linguistics / Literacy
  • Journalism
  • American - General
  • Language Arts & Disciplines / Journalism
  • United States
  • 20th century
  • American prose literature
  • History