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A Globe and Mail Top 100 Pick of 2006
The Summer of Love is already like a distant memory; the psychedelic underground has turned in on itself. John Dupre has deserted a perfectly satisfying life as a student in Toronto, drawn back to the US by the need to make a difference in the Revolution. He’s living in Boston—under an assumed name because he’s on the FBI’s wanted list for draft evasion.
His best friend is Tom Parker, an ex-GI turned righteous drug dealer. When John, Tom, and the militant feminist and Situationist Pam Zalman seize control of an underground newspaper and are put on the Weatherman hit list, there’s really no place to hide—they’re wanted on all sides.
It’s the year of the Harvard Square riot, the invasion of Cambodia, and Kent State. Campuses across America are host to demonstrations and riots. Burning ROTC buildings has become an everyday pastime. Pam and John forge a relationship where they’re struggling against sex roles. The Left is splintering into ever smaller and crazier micro-factions. And that’s when things begin to get really weird . . .
Looking Good is a masterfully crafted, meticulously reconstructed social history of the ’60s counterculture and a searching examination of gender identity—the magnificent, explosive climax to Difficulty at the Beginning.
[Maillard] has an extremely tight grip on his subject matter (I know, I was there), recounting the growing sectarianism of the New Left and its intensifying drug-fuelled paranoia, some of it quite justified. Anyone with memories of the political radicalism of the 60s will connect with this material. —NOW Magazine
A cast of soulful characters, a heartfelt examination of gender identity, and a meticulously detailed portrait of the 1960s. —Booklist
Readers who immerse themselves in the drug-hazed, paranoid world of the American underground that Maillard protrays in ‘Looking Good’ will be struck by a muscular, powerhouse narrative and rich characterization that’s evocative of fiction giants like Robert Stone. —Edmonton Journal
The final volume of the quartet is at least twice as long as any of the previous three books, and it packs a punch that is likewise heftier. —Librarian in Tie-Dye
A masterpiece fit to contend with the best novels of the last century. —Globe and Mail
448 Pages
538gr1.25in5.25in * 8in
September 10, 2006
9781897142097
01
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