Lost Sheep: Aspen's Counterculture in the 1970's
Kurt Brown
(Author)
Description
Lost Sheep recounts the author's journey from the "real" world of 1970s America to the rollicking, freedom-loving, outlaw world of Aspen. Blending personal narrative, local history, dramatic interlude, and cultural analysis, the story begins as a literal journey but quickly evolves into the memoir of an entire town-a time and place many consider to be Aspen's "Golden Age," when artists, eccentrics, and outlaws took over the city and transformed it into an alpine bohemia. The noteworthy cast of characters-famous, infamous, and unknown-includes Claudine Longet, Jack Nicholson, Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, Steve Martin, and Ted Bundy. The local residents are even more colorful, from a woman who feeds her dog nothing but vegetables to a bookstore owner who believes in "psychic surgeries," while everywhere art is being made-and a good deal of hay.Product Details
Price
$14.99
Publisher
Bower House
Publish Date
June 27, 2012
Pages
308
Dimensions
5.5 X 8.5 X 0.9 inches | 0.85 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780971367876
BISAC Categories:
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About the Author
Kurt Brown founded the Aspen Writers' Conference, and Writers' Conferences and Centers. He is the author of six chapbooks and six full-length collections of poetry. He has edited ten anthologies of poetry, including his newest (with Harold Schecter), Killer Verse: Poems about Murder and Mayhem. His memoir LOST SHEEP: Aspen's Counter-culture in the 1970s was published by Conundrum Press in 2012. He is also the author of SINCEREST FLATTERIES: A LITTLE BOOK OF IMITATIONS (Tupelo Press, 2007) and TIME-BOUND: POEMS (Tiger Bark Press, 2012). He taught for many years at Sarah Lawrence College in New York and most recently lived in Santa Barbara, California. He died in June 2013.