Hunter
Thompson
All
Gone Now
by Fred Reed
When Thompson blew his brains
out, a door closed somewhere and you could hear the latch click. The
main man had gone. Most of us can easily be replaced. There was only
one Hunter Thompson. I’ll heist one tonight to a fine, fine writer,
a voice of his time, the embodiment of an age the like of which there
never was and which, for good or bad, will never come again.
The Sixties look drab
now—unkempt Manson girls, the lost and unhappy, kids bleak and
bleary-brained after waking up with too many strangers in too many
sour crash pads. There was that. It was not a time for the
weak-minded. But for those whose youth passed in the freak years,
there was something gaudy and silly and even profound, something
delightfully warped, that nobody else would ever have. Thompson caught
it.
I didn’t know him. Others
have written better than I can of his work. But I knew the world that
gave rise to him.
Starting around 1964, a
restlessness came over the land, an itch. Kids trickled and later
flooded onto the highways as if called by something. I can’t explain
it. Few had done it before. Few do it now. They—we--set forth and
created the only country in which Thompson could have made sense.
It wasn’t the war, at first.
Nor was it only the usual impatience of youth with authority. Nor was
it even that we were young and the world was wide. There was a
revulsion against suburban emptiness, against the eight-to-five Ozzie
and Harriet gig, a rejection of the Establishment, which meant boring
jobs and singing commercials.
We discovered drugs, then
regarded as worse than virgin sacrifices to Moloch, and looked through
a window we could never name. If the times were out of joint, we were
seldom out of joints. Chemistry defined the life. You found a freak in
some rotting slum and said, “Hey, man, got some shit?” You toked
up. You got the munchies, the skitters, the fears. Parents really
didn’t understand. Dope, we said, will get you through times of no
money better than money will get you through times of no dope. It did.
Thompson, a savage writer, a grand middle finger raised against the
sky, essayed drugs and found them good. And said so, and we loved him.
When he wrote of getting wacked out of his mind on seven illicit
pharmaceuticals, and wandering in puzzled paranoia through the lobby
of existence, we shrieked with laughter. We knew the same drugs. We
too had tried desperately to look straight in public when the world
had turned into a slow-motion movie. When it was over, everybody went
into a law firm.
Our socio-political understanding was limited. After all, we were
pretty much kids. I remember having a discussion in Riverside,
California, of how Republicans reproduced. We didn’t think it could
be by sex. I figured it was by budding.
For a while though, it all worked. Apostles of the long-haul thumb, we
hitchhiked in altered mental states. I don’t recommend it without
guidance. We stood by the western highways as the big rigs roared by,
rocking in the wash and the keening of the tires, desert stretching
off to clot-red hills in the distance. At night we might buy bottles
of Triple Jack at some isolated gas station and dip into an arroyo,
roll a fat one and swill Jack and talk and hallucinate under the
stars. An insight of the times was that if you got fifty feet off the
beaten track and sat down, you didn’t exist. It still works if you
need it.
None of it was reasonable.
I’ve never found anything worthwhile that was.
Then there was politics, the
war. Thompson was rocket smart and knew you couldn’t work within the
system since that meant granting it legitimacy. Peace with Honor, the
Light at the End of the Tunnel, all the ashen columnists arguing about
timed withdrawal and incremental pressure. He knew it was about
profits for McDonnell Douglas and egotistical warts growing like
malignant goiters on the neck of the country. He was Johnny Pot Seed,
a Windowpane Ghandi, dangerous as Twain.
The times brought their
epiphanies. I remember being gezonked on mescaline in a pad in
Stafford, Virginia, and realizing that existence was the point of
execution in a giant Fortran program. So it’s all done in software,
I thought. I was floating in the universe. In the infinite darkness of
space the code stretched above and below in IBM blue letters hundreds
of feet high that converged to nothingness: N = N * 5, Go To 43, ITEST
= 4**IEXP. For an hour I was awash in understanding. The stereo was
playing Bolero, which was written by a Do-loop, so it all fitted.
Thompson savaged it all,
lampooned it, creating a world of consciousness-sculpting substances
and bad-ass motorcycles and absolute cynicism about the government.
Today, after thirty years of journalism, I can’t find the flaw in
his reasoning.
The other writer of the age
was Tom Wolfe, but he wasn’t in Thompson’s league. Wolfe was a
talented outsider looking perceptively at someone else’s trip.
Thompson lived the life, liked big-bore handguns and big-bore bikes
and had a liver analysis that read like a Merck catalog. His paranoia
may be style, but you can’t write what you aren’t almost.
I remember standing alone in
early afternoon beside some two-lane desert road in New Mexico, or
somewhere else, that undulated off through rolling hills and had
absolutely no traffic. I don’t know that I was on anything. Of
course, I don’t know that I wasn’t. A murky sun hung in an
aluminum sky like a fried egg waiting to fall and mesquite bushes
pocked the dry sand with blue mortar bursts. The silence was infinite.
I lay in the middle of the road for a while just because I could. Then
I followed a line of ants into the desert to see where they were
going.
A grey Buick Riviera, a
wheeled barge lost in the desert, slid to a stop. The trunk creaked
open like a jaw. A squatty little mushroomy woman behind the wheel
motioned me to get it. As we drove the cruise alarm buzzed, and she
told me it was a Communist radar. They were watching her from the
hills.
It was a Thompson moment.
Then it was over. Everybody
went into I-banking or something equally odious. We gave up drugs as
boring.
You can see why he ate his gun. Everything he hated has returned.
Nixon is back in the White House, Rumsnamara risen from the dead,
bombs falling on other peoples’ suburbs. The Pentagon is lying again
and democracy stalks yet another helpless country. This time the young
are already dead and there will be no joyous anarchy. The press,
housebroken, pees where it is told. But he gave it a hell of a try.