Strange attractor The hallucinatory life of Terence McKenna

Graham St John, 1968-

Book - 2025

"The first intellectual biography of the psychedelic pioneer Terence McKenna"--

Saved in:
1 being processed

2nd Floor New Shelf Show me where

154.4/St John
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 154.4/St John (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts ; London, England : The MIT Press 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Graham St John, 1968- (author)
Other Authors
Erik Davis (writer of foreword)
Physical Description
xxx, 517 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780262049573
  • Forework By
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • 1. Edge Runners
  • 2. Berkeley
  • 3. Terry Incognita
  • 4. La Chorrera
  • 5. Return To Paradise
  • 6. Growmance
  • 7. Lux Natura
  • 8. Stand-Up Philosopher
  • 9. Timewave Zero
  • 10. Psychedelic Guru
  • 11. Zone Ghost
  • 12. Metamorphosis
  • Appendix A. Acknowledgments And Sources
  • Appendix B. The McKennaverse
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This definitive biography from cultural historian St John (Weekend Societies) explores the life and ideas of psychedelic philosopher Terence McKenna, who died in 2000. The culmination of a heroic research effort, given the loss of McKenna's archives in three separate fires, the biography charts McKenna's transformation from a gawky, science fiction--loving "small-town boy from Colorado" into "the ascendant Oracle of the Weird." While McKenna's experiments with mind-altering substances like morning glory seeds began early, an encounter with DMT at UC Berkeley and subsequent visions of "machine-like language elves" kick-started his lifelong promotion of hallucinogens as "enzymes for the imagination." From there, St John follows McKenna as he hunts butterflies in Asia while avoiding arrest for drug-smuggling; sojourns in the Amazon, where, following copious psilocybin use, he believed he "crank-started the Millennium"; and, late in life, becomes a guru for 1990s rave culture. St John also sheds ample light on McKenna's influences and his philosophies, including his late-'60s prediction of "a worldwide 'electronic community' interconnected with 'total knowledge' on demand"--an uncanny foreshadowing of the internet. Some of the author's explanations of McKenna's more esoteric notions are frustratingly dense; still, the occasional impenetrability is made up for by captivatingly humanizing depictions of McKenna's family life (his response to taking his eight-year-old daughter to Chuck E. Cheese: "MEDIOCRITY IS DEATH"). It's an account as weird, wild, and nontraditional as its subject. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved