The author coolly and unsentimentally distills from this morass a feeling of something pure and unsullied. One asks, eventually, if the hallucinations, whatever their source, are so very far from the vague misgivings and hopeful imaginings of the man in the street. And over all there seems to hang the heavy shadow of self-destructiveness, not only in terms of their present situation but with regard to what the future holds for them-and the question is inescapable, for human society as well? In this mirror reflecting the present, personal relations deteriorate, violence of the moment erupts, and communication inches slowly towards nullity. The participants seem caught in their hard-rock scene, sadly unfree, having neither the will nor the energy to break away. In rapidly sketched scenes gliding from the everyday real to the hallucinatory, the author has used what he himself calls his "narrative zoom lens." The novel is all but plotless, but the imagery is tellingly vivid, "the literary equivalent of genre painting," according to one critic. A youth of college age, his older mistress, friends-random friends, they might be called-living near an American military base and experimenting with drugs both hard and soft.
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