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FEATURE: Rocky Road (Editorial: The Kerouac Crowd; The Leary Crowd; The French Connection; Maroc & Roll;
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ROCKY ROAD
versatile fellow he is. A
Cambridge graduate who
had made a name for


The legendary Mr Naughty. More
fun than cream cakes and wittier
than Frankie Howard.

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COFFEEHOUSE CULTURE HITS THE STONEY TRAIL
SORRY THAT SHOULD be 'trail-ER'. This is the point when,
although the lights are dim, you know it is safe to go and get a
hot-dog, some popcorn, a Pepsi, chat up the usherette, have a
pee and still get back without missing a thing. Alas, however,
little did you know that while you were in the foyer everybody in
the auditorium spontaneously removed all their clothes, had sex
with an attractive person sitting near them, shared a joint and a
tub of Haagan-Dazs and reclothed themselves in time to watch
the main feature. Such is life. Well, life in the fantasy fast-lane
occupied by the Cannabisness Section, anyway.
CoBut real life is not like that. Is
it? In case it is, perhaps you

had better stay where you are.
You wouldn't want to miss
something exciting, now would
you? So, sitting comfortably?
Good. Then here we go.
CoSo, okay, maybe hyping a
publication is not quite like
hyping a movie. But we do
have some tasty morsels for
future issues tucked away in
an envelope somewhere.
TOP OF PAGE

BBACK TO THE FUTURE

History, mystery, pi . . . . Oh,
never mind. But we do mind.
We mind the way history has
been bleached clean, sanit-
ised and rendered whole-
someish. Not all of it. Just the
bits we're interested in. But in Back To The Future we
should rectify that. In a regular
series of fun, fun, fun features
stamped with Coffeehouse
Culture's stupid but inimitable
sense of humour, we'll be
looking at the bits of history
school missed out. If you are
wondering where the
counterculture came from,
Back To The Future will tell
you. With a cast of thousands
to assist us, we will be tracing
our way back towards the
truth. Meeting Conquerors,
Shamen, Despots, Clowns,
Saints, Freaks, Seers,
Geniuses, Fiends (dope and
diabolic) and some jolly nice
chaps, we will travel the world
sharing joints, jokes and jeers
with those who helped create
the culture of consciousness.
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HIHIT THE ROAD J . . . .

With the world at our fingertips
and magic boots on our feet
we will be ....
CoSpeeding down the road
with Jack Kerouac and the
real Dean Moriarty, we will try
to pass the Acid Test as we
explore the highways, byways
and Oh, My! ways of the
counterculture that grew up
like a grass plant around this
influential coterie of friends.


The man who started it all. When
Jack hit the road he created the
whole Beat culture. Kerouac's
seminal classic 'On The Road' still
defines the essentials of the
alternative society.

CoCriss-crossing the USA in
search of those who helped
to mould the future we are all
now starting to live we will
encounter movers, shakers
and one or two fakers.


Neil Cassady was the real Dean
Moriarty, the lead character in
Kerouac's bestseller. Around at
the start of it all, he was still
speeding down his personal
highway in the late 60s when he
drove Ken Kesey's outrageous
'Further On' bus.

CoIn California we will meet
arch-smugglers (although
they did smuggle things other
than arches), the Brotherhood
of Eternal Love. Dressed in
our 'Colours' we will be there
as the rampaging Hell's
Angels are reinvented as
cuddly acid-saints. Dancing
in the dawn in Golden Gate
Park and in the lab with acid-
king Owsley, we will be wak-
ing up to California Sunshine
in all its forms.
TOP OF PAGE/FURTHER READING

REAREALLY LEERY

And crossing to the other side
of the Lost Continent, we will

join the court of Owsley's
Jester. With timid, self-
effacing Timothy Leary we will
watch ego overwhelm
evolution. There will be many
new friends to make: Michael
Hollingshead, the man who
turned on Aldous Huxley;
Alexander Shulgin, the man
who invented Ecstasy; Andy
Warhol, the man who conned
the art world and many more.
But there will also be old
friends to meet again: many
from the Kerouac-crowd,
including Allen Ginsberg, for
over 30 years one of the most
active and influential
propagandists for dope use
and, coincidentally, a poet of
note, who will tell us why he
wore his underpants on his
head.
CoIf we seem lost in the USSA,
it is only because there is so
much to see and do. But we



The poetic underpants man,
Allen Ginsburg.

haven't forgotten that we are
world travellers.
CoThe world, however, is a big
place so you will forgive us if
we only make flying visits from
here.
TOP OF PAGE/FURTHER READING

FREFRENCH KISSING

We will have our tongues
down the throat of French
hypocrisy as we join Napoleon
in North Africa. As he
'liberates' the historic and
artistic treasures of the Middle
East by the sack load we will
marvel at the audacity of


French colonisation bears its finest fruit.

this small man with a nipple
fixation. And, back in Paris, it's
party-time with the Club des
Hashashins where such
notables as Dumas,
Baudelaire and Moreau will be
found somewhere over the
Rimbaud where the jam is
green and says: "High!" But
what a party.
TOP OF PAGE

FDON'T KNOCK MAROC
For Hassan Al Sabbah and his
legendary band of bloodthirsty
Hashishins (from whom we
get the word 'assassin'),
gardening was more than a
hobby. High in the Atlas
Mountains was his famed
Garden of Earthly Delights in
which men lost their souls to
excess and pleasure. And,
lucky us, we have a visitors'
day pass. Can't wait.
TOP OF PAGE

PPITHING OFF THE
PITPITINDIANS
With pith helmets on their
heads and exploding bibles in
their hands, the British thought
they could bring civilisation to
the 'savages' of India. As the
civilising influence of the East
India Company cut swathes
through the Indian subcontin-
ent, the priests and pundits
could only try to preserve their
5000 year culture. Not much
good came of the Brit's
occupation of India except ....
The impressively named
Indian Hemp Drugs
Commission report of 1894
contains everything you ever
wanted to know about dope
and its history in India. And
what a breathtaking story it is.

TOP OF PAGE

UNAUGHTY BUT NICE
We thought it was Howard's
end when Mr Marks got 40,000
years in prison for his
smuggling activities. It was,
however, just a beginning.
Back on the outside, he has
risen again to tell his story.
Raconteur and rebel,
smuggler and super-spy,
criminal and comedian, nice
but very, very naughty, what a

himself as a legitimate
businessman before leaving
college, Howard was chosen
for a less conventional path.
More than anyone else this
century, Howard has
demonstrated his commit-
ment to cannabis. A present-
day legend of the cannabis
culture, Howard is a guy to
whom we'd give full marks
TOP OF PAGE/FURTHER READING
LLIBERATING LONDON
LEGENNLEGENDS

Up from the underground:
Unidentified Flying Objects
landing in Tottenham Court
Road, Hoppy and the odd
socks, John and Yoko (we
were there), International
Times, Middle Earth, the
Ormsby-Gores, and other
beautiful people. Down and
out in sunny South Kensington
with Brian Jones, at the Free
School being . . . well . . . free,
freshly napalmed peace and
sub-machine guns at the
Roundhouse, 24 hour
Technicolor Nightmares,
taking a trip with Granny, "Oh
yea, we're the London Boys"
and so much more.
TOP OF PAGE/FURTHER READING

WHITE BIKES & NOT
SO DIDDLEY SQUATS

As we criss-cross the globe
visiting the places where it
happened and finding the
movers and shakers who 'just
did it', we'll be paying
respectful attention to the city
that has given freedom and
us sanctuary -- Amsterdam.
Exploring the traditions that
have made Holland the clos-
est thing to Heaven on Earth
available today, we will take in
the Provos, the squatter
movement and every aspect
of this City of Light. In every
way we'll be celebrating its
sacred role as the Protector of
Freedom to Explore Your
Own Consciousness.
CoTOP OF PAGE

Just another cop out
ANTI-DRUGS
POLICY No. 2

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Somewhat reluctantly,
Coffeehouse Culture's anti-drugs
policy has to include the major
organic hallucinogens mush-
rooms, yage, peyote and many
others. Whilst we believe
that these substances have
the potential to produce
extremely positive life-
changing effects in the
individual and society, we
have to acknowledge their
dangers. For the majority,
the major hallucinogens are a
safe if somewhat exhausting
medium through which to
experience dramatically
increased consciousness.
However, used in uncontrolled
situations by inexperienced
and potentially fragile people,
they can produce effects that
are at best traumatising and
at worst permanently damaging
.CoCoffeehouse Culture
believes that the major halluc-
inogens have the potential to
solve many of society's problems.
We are not alone in this belief.
In the early 1960s, the English
writer, Aldous Huxley,
introduced described a society
where the hallucinogenic
experience is included as a
compulsory part of the
educational system. Within
this society, the hallucinogenic
experience has lead to such
a level of individual self-
actualisation that social evils
have disappeared. 'Island' is,
of course, fiction. But we
would like to hope that it
offers pointers for a future
where small-minded bigotry
does not win out over social
benefit.
CoHowever, whilst the major
hallucinogens remain outside
the acceptable social frame-
work, whilst they are available
for use only in uncontrolled
situations, we must uphold
our responsibilities to our
readers and include them in
our anti-drugs policy. That
said, Coffeehouse Culture
is a publication that deals
with aspects of increased
consciousness. And it is
impossible to truly cover the
subject of increased
consciousness without writing
about chemically-induced
experiences. They are, after
all, the most common medium
through which people experi-
ence dramatically increased
consciousness. In an effort to
resolve this dilemma,
Coffeehouse Culture will always
include a clearly-worded, explan-
atory warning with every article
that deals with or mentions the
major hallucinogens.
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THE MAN WHO GAVE THE DOORS THEIR NAME
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Watch out for our Aldous Huxley special issue. Born into one of the
families that created Victorian Britain's intellectual establishment, Huxley
was not only a great intellectual, an inspiring lecturer and a best-selling
novelist but a courageous visionary and mystic who was among the first
adventurers in consciousness. With extracts from his writings, a full
biography, an analysis of what he had to say and his visions for the
future, the dramatic story of his LSD- eased death and much more,
Coffeehouse Culture will be paying the fullest tribute to his hero of the
revolution in consciousness.
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FURTHER READING GUIDE
Our Personal Recommendations
in association with Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk

There are just so many influential, profound and glorious books out there dealing with the
subjects covered on this page that we were hard pressed to limit ourselves to the 17 (yes, 17, sorry
about that) that are recommended below. Among the books below are some that have defined this culture.
Everyone should have read them. But, if you haven't, now is the time to rectify that situation.

ROCKY ROAD

There are books one owns for pleasure and there are books one owns because no library would be
complete without them. Below are some of the literary gems that have helped to define this culture plus
some of the best factual tomes around. Most of them we own or have read. Unfortunately, some of the
crucial books we would have liked to have recommended (like 'The Brotherhood of Eternal Love' by
Stewart Tendler & David May, 'Ladies and Gentlemen, Lenny Bruce' by Albert Goldman and "Haight Ashbury' by
Charles Perry) are out of print at the moment.


ON THE ROAD
By
Jack Kerouac



The book that
started it all --
Kerouac's literary
masterpiece.
This, my friends,
is lit-er-at-ure.
Like a Thelonious Monk number, it
is a strange blend of rhythms and
counter-rhythms played out
through surreal illusions and
slightly embarrassing free-form,
somewhat experimental, prose.
Dripping with hippness and oozing
speed-induced weirdness, this is
the tale of Dean Moriarty and his
travels through America. Not the
easiest read in the world but
certainly one worth trying.
UK READERS SAVE £1.40
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xx HOWL/
KADDISH
By
Allen Ginsberg


Cast in the
role of group
nerd, Allen
Ginsberg
cccccccccccccccccccccccemerged as
one of the
gems in the
crown of the
counterculture
In the original
City Lights
editions (very
hip to own),
these are the
books that
launched his
career.


UK READERS: HOWL/KADDISH
US READERS: HOWL/KADDISH
xx
NAKED
LUNCH
By
William S.
Burroughs

The last, if not
least of the
counterculture's
unholy trinity,
Burroughs is
another infinitely hip writer and
this is his most famous and most
readable book. It has its
moments but the weirdness over-
whelms readability far too often.
Never the most approachable
writer (except, of course, from
the rear) in the genre, Burroughs
gets weirder and weirder from
this book on. Set in Tangier (I
believe) it is heavy on insects
and paranoia. Every page reeks
of Bill's smack habit.
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JACK KEROUAC
By
Barry Miles



Although I have
not read this, I
am recommend-
ing on the basis
of the Miles book
I have read --
the Ginsberg biog. As manager of
the London's hip Indica bookshop
(it was at the Indica Gallery -- the
bit of the Indica mini-empire for
people who couldn't read -- that
John met Yoko), Miles was right at
the heart of the scene. But he was
in London. Nonetheless, he is an
excellent researcher who puts his
material together with care.

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GINSBERG
By
Barry Miles


This is a great
book. A really
good read and
packed full of
well researched
material. Enrich-
ed by Miles' own
reminiscences of the great man, it
was a joy to read. Of all the unholy
trinity, Ginsberg is, perhaps, the
one we owe most to. One of the
very first legalise pot protesters,
he was very influential in ending
the Vietnam conflict when he
organised a well supported protest
designed to levitate the Pentagon.
Highly recommended.

UK READERS SAVE £3.00
OUT OF PRINT IN US
xx
OFF THE ROAD
By
Carolyn
Cassady

Neal Cassady
was, of course,
the model for
Dean Moriarty,
the fictional hero
of Kerouac's masterpiece. But he was much
more interesting than that and far
more influential. This a book
packed full of personal memories
of some of the main characters in
the counterculture drama. Lots of
new (to me, anyway) information
about the man with his hands full.
Interesting stuff about Edgar
Cayce and Ken Kesey. A good
read.
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THE ELECTRIC
KOOL-AID
ACID TEST
By
Tom Wolfe


In the days when
Tom Wolfe was
the chief repre-
sentative of the
'new journalism' that had been so
successfully applied by Rolling
Stone, this was the book that made
his name. And what a goody it is.
The tale of Ken Kesey, Ken Babbs
and the Further-On bus, it features
some of the great names of the
hippy culture. Fantastic biograph-
ical stuff about Owsley and his acid
lab. Wonderfully written. A great
read and a 'must have' for every
hip library. Highly recommended.

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xx
DAYS IN
THE LIFE
By
Jonathan Green



We picked up this
little gem in a
remaindered bin
in the Charing
Cross Road for tuppence; and a great buy it turned out to be. Consisting of reminiscences from a lot of people you've never heard of who lived in the Notting Hill area of London in 1967 it is evocative of the times but is probably of more interest to us than anyone as that's where we lived at the time and we knew some of the people interviewed. Has some great stories about Germaine Greer and quotes from Hoppy.
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NOT AVAILABLE IN THE US
xx
MR NICE
By
Howard Marks




The teller of tales
tells his. Very
easy and fun to
read with lots of
outrageous dope
tales and visionary scams. Every-
one who was a smoker in the UK
in the 1960s and 70s owes Mr.
Marks a debt of gratitude; we all
smoked his dope. The boyo from
the valleys made it to the heights
of decadence and elegant self-
indulgence on a wing and a prayer
(plus a hell of a lot of cunning,
intelligence and bald-faced
blagging). Not as famous as Tom
Jones but a lot more fun, Mr
Marks is the Welshman we love
to love.

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THE MAN WHO GAVE THE DOORS THEIR NAME

Don't be fooled by the size of the box, Aldous Huxley was, perhaps, more influential than any of them.
Before the Beat Generation, when the world wore a stiff upper lip and a grey suit, Huxley was 'coming in
colours.' Emerging from the mid-war Literati on back of a series of slight but beautifully written
novels, Huxley scandalised the world with a novel so full of new concepts and visionary acumen, he
had to have been taking something. And, with the publication of his essays on his own psychedelic
experiences, we all knew what it was.


ISLAND
By
Aldous Huxley




If you have not
read this wonder-
ful novel of a
society based
around increased
consciousness, you are not com-
plete as a person. Encapsulating
some of the key phrases that we
use to define our reality (like 'here
and now'), this is a visionary treat-
ise that not only bears witness to
the inspirational aspects of the
psychedelic experience but offers
a blueprint of sorts for how such a
society might be structured. One
of the great books.

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THE DOORS OF
PERCEPTION/
HEAVEN & HELL
By
Aldous Huxley


A great intellect-
ual with an
immense interest
in a wide range
of subjects, Huxley scandalised the
world with these accounts of his
experiences on mescaline. It is,
as those of us who have tried know, extremely difficult to encapsulate the multimedia-ness and ineffable spirituality of a trip. Huxley, however, does it -- not surprisingly --- with grace and style. No bookself should be without it. Great.

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xx
MOKSHA
Edited By
Michael Horwitz


Worth buying just
for Laura
Huxley's descript-
ion of her
husband's death,
Moksha shows
just how inspired
by the psychedelic experience
Huxley was. This is a book full of
essays, letters and notes that
attest to the great man's unden-
iable originality of vision and
thought. There is much new
information tucked away in its
pages with a number of key
characters in the drama (like
Timothy Leary) making an
appearance. Highly recommended.

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OTHER CRUCIAL BOOKS

In those far off days when avant guard really meant something, most us poseurs tried to
stay abreast of the 'big boys' who had got the intellectual march on us. For many of us it was a time
of intellectual discovery -- the discovery being that some of the books we were reading to 'stay
abreast' actually were very good. Here are three of them. Each one of these books, in its own
way, had tremendous influence.


THE GLASS
BEAD GAME
By
Hermann
Hesse



Fantastically influ-
ential, this is the
best of Hermann
Hesse's work.
The tale of a strange monastic
order of intellectuals who practice a
technique of transcendence through
a game -- The Glass Bead Game of
the title -- it inspired so many of
us. Leary named his organisation
after the city in which the story is
set and the Brotherhood of Eternal
Love structured their vast
smuggling operation around the
concepts it contains. The book
contains a number of appendices
among which are three of the most
incredibly beautiful, inspiring and
well written short stories ever. It is
worth buying just for these.

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SIDDHARTHA
By
Hermann Hesse



This is another
one that set our
world on fire. For
many of us it was
our introduction
to the world of eastern mysticism that could only send us chugging down to the Penguin Bookshop for Christmas Humphrey's books on buddhism. A short but extremely elegant novel that sets itself up as a biography of the Lord Buddha, we had no idea just how closely it stuck to Gautama's teachings. The lead character comes across as a totally unpretentious and self- actualised individual. The book ends with a scene of such immense evocational power that it changed many a life. You must read this.

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CATCH 22
By
Joseph Heller



Although it was
published in
1962 it took a
few years for
Heller's anti-war
masterpiece to catch us up. But when it did -- wow, what a piece of work. An intense and weird satire based on a US airforce base in Italy, it is full of great characters and snappy phrases and has some of the most wonderful irreverent black humour ever. Extremely clever and meaningful, of course, it was another one that had tremendous influence. Like all great art it had a profound lesson to teach us -- that Catch 22 is a real phenomena that affects all ourlives. But you gotta laugh at the irony of it all. Haven't you?
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SEE PAGES 2, 3, 4, 11, 16, 17 AND 21 FOR MORE FURTHER READING GUIDES

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