"The book that changed the course of literature. This is
the original postmodern novel. More like a film projected directly
into the brain. Seminal fiction."
-- Henry W.Targowski
Naked Lunch is a postmodern slipstream novel written by William
S. Burroughs. It was published in 1959.
Written in Tangiers and Paris while Burroughs was still a narcotics
addict. Working titles: Word Hoard , Interzone , Ignorant Armies
. Jack Kerouac gave the book its final title and Allen Ginsberg
collated the loose pages into a manuscript. Part of this manuscript
first appeared in the Chicago-based literary magazine Big Table
. Maurice Girodias published the first edition of the novel in
Paris. Excerpts from this novel were read by Burroughs on side
A of the LP: Call Me Burroughs , 1965. David Cronenberg transformed
the book into a film in 1991.
Naked Lunch is one of the great boys' adventure stories of our
time. All the ingredients of the traditional racy yarn are there:
captive-takings, elaborate tortures, a hint of sexual slavery
('He pulls her brutally to her feet and pins her hands behind
her...'), a capitalist criminal with a dubiously exotic name (Salvador
Hassan O'Leary, alias 'The Afterbirth Tycoon'), even a high-speed
chase at the end, climaxing in a cop-killing. Naked Lunch is also
an autobiographical account of a trip to hell and back.
In The Naked Lunch , Burroughs compares organized society with
that of its most extreme opposite, the invisible society of drug
addicts. His implicit conclusion is that the two are not very
different, certainly at the points where they make the closest
contact -- in prisons and psychiatric institutions...
Synopsis
Naked Lunch is the unnerving tale of a narcotics addict's monumental
descent into hell, as he travels from New York to Tangiers, and
then into the Interzone. There he finds a nightmarish modern urban
wasteland in which the forces of evil vie for control of the individual
and all of humanity. This abridged recording is in the author's
own voice.
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