cover image The Proud Highway:: Saga of a Desperate Southern Gentleman

The Proud Highway:: Saga of a Desperate Southern Gentleman

Hunter S. Thompson. Villard Books, $29.95 (1pp) ISBN 978-0-679-40695-2

Thompson (Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas), according to editor Brinkley, has written more than 20,000 letters. For bile and outrageousness, this first volume in a collection of those letters to friends, editors, agents and others is peerless. When literary agent Sterling Lord declined to represent him, Thompson threatened to ""cave in your face and scatter your teeth all over Fifth Avenue."" Struggling to earn a living by freelancing, the author wrote President Johnson (addressed as ""Dear Lyndon""), requesting he appoint Thompson governor of American Samoa to afford him a ""pacific place"" in which to write a novel ""of overwhelming importance."" Railing against corruption and stupidity, temperamentally unable to suffer the authority of fools, Thompson cannot keep regular jobs and roams the world, forever struggling for money and desperate for recognition of his considerable talent. But he doesn't hesitate to address the few writers and editors he admires with requests for help, comments on their work or generous praise. By turns exasperating and entertaining, this is also a devastating portrait of the writer as an incorrigible outsider. (June)