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Rating: Summary: Who else has written about a one-armed girl? Review: If you are looking for a nostalgic rehash of Dead tour as a pure, utopic, mythical experience, this may not be the book for you. Let's just get that fact out of the way so that you won't be dissapointed when you open this novel and find the complex, multifaceted and realistic portrayal of the Grateful Dead scene that serves as the backdrop to this story. The primary reason to read this book is for the characters. Melanie, the brassy one-armed runaway, is unique to the world of fiction, and counters Jason's charming naivety and wide-eyed trust in fate with her cunning and wit. Also serving as a foil to Jason is the ever-hacking Harry, who beneath the surly quips and malcontented one-liners is a generous and complicated man who never quite figured out what to do with himself, but left an interesting past trying. This novel explores the issues of loyalty and dependence among characters who are living in a universe in which there is no reliable moral yardstick, but who manage to maintain their sense of humanity regardless.
Rating: Summary: A First Novel Review: It's a first novel, with many of the characteristics of such books--a fascination with late adolescence, a romanticization of young infatuation and sexuality, a desire to provide a cautionary tale. Ludington isn't the real thing--yet. His plot is far from original, and the characters don't really live; many of the names pass through, like faces you might see at a Dead show, identifiable only by one major quirk (she's one-armed, he's from Philly, he shoots heroin). I suspect Ludington wanted to capture the swirl of people that buzzed around "tour." Pynchon's short story "Entropy" achieves this effect in a more condensed fashion. Where the novel is good, though, is where it looks to its models (Whitman and Kerouac, especially). Ludington has a nice ability to get lyrical about landscape, about experience, even about drug highs. I'd like to see a more interior novel from him eventually; this would play to his strengths. It's a road novel, and though the road part of it gets old (except for Deadheads, perhaps, who might be able to nod knowingly at the names of civic arenas) the narration of the experience of being on the road is appealing. Ultimately, this novel is quite promising but rarely transcends that. It bears the earnestness of privileged twenty-year-olds memorializing their dabbling with the dangerous side of life. I suspect Ludington has a very good novel in him, but like Franzen's or Lethem's or Chabon's earlier books (THE TWENTY-SEVENTH CITY or MOTHERLESS BROOKLYN or MYSTERIES OF PITTSBURGH) this feels like a personal story, grounded in a personal place, that he needs to get out before he can get on with the business of writing his real "Great American Novel."
Rating: Summary: This Darkness Got To Give. Review: Max Ludington can write. The book is filled with quick and vivid descriptions. He also can handle a back and forth plotline. The story? Meh. A preppie deadhead quits school, hits succesive GD tours, meets women, loses friends, gets smack habit. While grounded in a darker reality the book still has a rather cliched approach to plot. Perhaps I expected a more comical and swirling psychedelic narrative and was disappointed by the typical marijuana leads to heroin line. Still I look forward to more from this writer.
Rating: Summary: Good, but left me wanting more Review: Max Ludington has written a remarkable book in "Tiger in a Trance," his insiders look into the cult of the Grateful Dead.
There are lines that stopped me cold in this book, such as in the scene where the protagonist, Jason, has just administered a hit of killer dope and immediately makes for the toilet. "I read the legend inscribed at the top of the porcelain bowl: American Standard. I nodded my head, feeling, as LSD had taught me sometimes to feel, that wisdom was being imparted to me in ways I was only occasionally aware of."
One gets the feeling of what it was to be "on tour" during the mid `80s with the Dead. The drab sameness of American cities, the phenomena of a Hartford or a Worcester being transformed into a special place for the two days the Dead were in town, then returning to its mundane 9 to 5 existence. Ludington successfully renders the time and place perfectly in this book as he, quite believably, traces Jason's descent from rather privileged Deadhead lifestyle into serious drug use and the dangers that lifestyle entails. When Jason loses his pal Randy (who made their way through the tours selling t-shirts), he loses his moral compass - a point that is made clear late in the book when Jason remembers driving with Randy years before, heading to another Dead show at Alpine Valley, when a perfectly rendered bluegrass gospel song comes on the radio: "We listened not looking at each other, trying to contain the charge arcing between the music and the green triumph of the Iowa summer. We didn't talk about it afterward. The song ended and Randy shut off the radio, and we let it dissipate for a few miles."
I saw the Dead a number of times during the years Ludington describes and I can readily attest to the changes in the scene as the years went by, such as when "Touch of Grey" became so big and brought with it a lot of newcomers - I experienced this up in Maine at the Oxford Speedway shows - and the disappointing (to Deadheads, anyway) Dylan/Dead series of concerts. I never went `on tour' and only saw the Dead when they came my way (and never after Brent died) - so "Tiger in a Trance" gave me a good idea as to what was going on in the lives of all these people that I would see, that seemed to have found something in life worth getting excited about - no small feat in the America of the `80s.
What I was hoping for in this book, and did not quite get, was some examination of why the music of the Grateful Dead was able to take over the lives of so many people - why no other band had ever inspired people to changes their lives. I think I found the answer in a book on an entirely different topic when I read the following passage and the Deadheads I mixed with immediately came to mind: "Attended by a motley crew of men and women who were shockingly ordinary, unremarkable for intellectual acumen, social grace, wit or quickness..."
This description of first followers of Jesus, written by Donald Spoto in his book "The Hidden Life of Jesus," to me perfectly describes the fans of the Grateful Dead. When I ran into this passage in Spoto's book, it brought to mind a nascent thought that was beginning to gather steam - that Jerry Garcia was, in many ways, an American Jesus. Just as Christ's followers followed him from place to place to hear him preach, so did the Deadheads follow the Grateful Dead (mostly for Jerry) from place to place, hoping for the band's alchemy to spark and provide that window from which they would achieve a moment of grace, an awakening of the spirit within them, as a group, however fleeting it may have been (or fueled by the intake of narcotics).
America changed significantly when Jerry died. Something vital in its spirit was cauterized, and we will not likely see its like again in our lifetime. The magic of the Dead was the magic that is found in rare moments - when things suddenly come together and life makes sense, and the good Dead moments provided this magic in a way that is completely ineffable. The Grateful Dead played primarily to an audience that was, for the most part, incapable of examining closely what is was they were experiencing. They just knew when it was there and when it was not, and were very grateful for those moments when it was there.
Music alone provides the means be which we may get a glimpse of the spiritual nature that we know is inside of us (and which is buried entirely by the impedimenta of our day-to-day lives) and the Dead, despite their lapses and faults, were the only vehicle providing this window of opportunity for the masses. Bless the Deadheads, for they were the true seekers of our times, and Ludington's book gets close to nailing what is was like inside this peculiarly American quest for enlightenment.
Rating: Summary: Who else has written about a one-armed girl? Review: Tiger in a Trance (repeating Just Say No to itself over and over)? I don't think so. Deadheads probably already know the place to find the best piece of GD literature out there - http://www.sugarmegs.org Click on the Mad Hatter - he'll show you the way! It may take a little trip but the best stuff always does! You just gotta poke around...
Rating: Summary: Better Deadhead writing at Sugarmegs! Review: Tiger in a Trance (repeating Just Say No to itself over and over)? I don't think so. Deadheads probably already know the place to find the best piece of GD literature out there - http://www.sugarmegs.org Click on the Mad Hatter - he'll show you the way! It may take a little trip but the best stuff always does! You just gotta poke around...
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