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Drop City Reprint Edition, Kindle Edition

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 804 ratings

It is 1970, and a down-at-the-heels California commune devoted to peace, free love, and the simple life has decided to relocate to the last frontier—the unforgiving landscape of interior Alaska—in the ultimate expression of going back to the land. Armed with the spirit of adventure and naïve optimism, the inhabitants of “Drop City” arrive in the wilderness of Alaska only to find their utopia already populated by other young homesteaders. When the two communities collide, unexpected friendships and dangerous enmities are born as everyone struggles with the bare essentials of life: love, nourishment, and a roof over one’s head. Rich, allusive, and unsentimental, T.C. Boyle’s ninth novel is a tour de force infused with the lyricism and take-no-prisoners storytelling for which he is justly famous.
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

With Drop City, T. Coraghessan Boyle offers proof that he has become one of America's most prolific, gifted storytellers. Set in the 1970s, Boyle entertains readers with the denizens of "Drop City," a counterculture California commune that welcomes anyone wanting to live off the grid, use drugs, and practice free love. Boyle sublimely captures the sociology of its rebellious members, who doubt the sincerity or beliefs of newcomers, express some insecurity about nonconformity, and chastise outsiders while remaining oblivious to their own hypocrisy. Marco, Pan, Star, and other "cats" and "chicks" live hassle-free until dissention and cries of racism mount amid increasing run-ins with the local government (a young girl is raped, installation of a sewage system is mandated, a mother lets her toddlers drink LSD-laced juice). Seeking refuge, the citizens move north, to Alaska, to reinvent their utopia, but soon learn the natural environment is more unforgiving of a lackadaisical lifestyle.

Drop City is funny, evocative, and well-paced, shifting between the hippies and the Alaskan locals--primarily Sess and his new bride Pamela (a city dweller who arranged stays with several trappers over a few weeks to determine whom she would marry)--until the two cultures collide. Balanced between plot and character, Boyle excels at describing the physical world and his characters' interaction with it, whether portraying the harshness (or sheer beauty) of the Alaskan wilderness, the simple survival routines of its grizzled inhabitants, or the sounds wafting through Drop City: "the goats bleating to be milked or fed, the single sharp ringing note of a dog surprised by its own hunger, the regular slap of the screen door at the back of the house--and underneath it all, like the soundtrack to a movie, the dull hum of rock and roll leaking out the kitchen windows." Truly American in spirit, Drop City is a strong novel of freedom and those in pursuit of lives of liberty. --Michael Ferch

From Publishers Weekly

Boyle has a wonderful eye for the comedy of imposture when the self-deceived themselves practice deception. His ninth novel, which centers on the travails of a hippie commune, Drop City, in the early '70s, gives him plenty of poseurs to work with. Drop City, in Sonoma County, Calif., is run, in a manner of speaking, by a gold-toothed purveyor of Aquarian notions, Norm Sender. The Drop City family includes Pan (aka Ronnie) and his high school pal Star (aka Paulette Regina Starr), who have fled from the East Coast together; two rather predatory black dudes; and a variegated crew of longhaired "cats" and flower-child "chicks." Star, sweet but often naive, is the opposite of Pan, beneath whose free love patter lurks an unnerving rapacity. Star soon hooks up with Marco, whose solid virtues are concealed beneath his veil of hair. When "The Man," in the person of the Sonoma County sheriff's department, condemns the property, Norm, who has inherited other property far away in Boynton, Alaska, proposes a tribal migration north. Meanwhile, the news in Boynton is that local trapper Cecil "Sess" Harder is marrying Pamela McCoon, after an eccentric courtship ritual. Sess's major problem lately has been a violent feud with Joe Bosky, the local bush pilot. When the Drop City hippie bus rolls into Boynton, a comic clash of civilizations ensues. Building utopia upriver from the Harders, Drop City's denizens discover that polar climes demand rather drastic behavioral adaptations. Boyle understands the multitudinous, sneaky ways innocence insulates itself from ambiguity-but in this novel he leavens that cynical insight with genuine sweetness. While the Day-Glo of the hippie era has long since faded, this novel brings it all back home-and helps us see how much in the American grain it all really was.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B000PC0SHI
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Books; Reprint edition (January 27, 2004)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 27, 2004
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 721 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 468 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 804 ratings

About the author

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T. Coraghessan Boyle
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T. C. Boyle is the author of eleven novels, including World's End (winner of the PEN/FaulknerAward), Drop City (a New York Times bestseller and finalist for the National Book Award), and The Inner Circle. His most recent story collections are Tooth and Claw and The Human Fly and Other Stories.

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
804 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on December 11, 2011
A fascinating and engrossing fictional analysis of 1960's youthful idealism and the search for Utopia. I have often thought that `utopia' really should be a dirty word - you don't have to look far within modern history to find examples of suffering when people or governments tried to establish the `perfect world'. Surely it is self-defeating?

Drop City traces in all its gory details the collapse of the Counter Culture, as represented by one small commune in 1970/1971. The characters in Drop City are the hard core hippies - the purists. Thus there is LSD laced fruit juice on special days for all, including the children; the hourly and endless joint passing and the openness of Free Sex.

The novel raises several points. First, to be a hippy was mostly about being white and middle class, and we see that generally the African American of the era had issues and problems beyond the understanding of anybody else. The free sex philosophy probably forced many young "Hippy Chicks", through peer pressure and societal expectations, to act out sexual approaches or risk being branded as uptight or becoming, worst of the worst, "Just like your mother". There was nothing feminist or empowering about that. Also, the counter culture fashion, in both clothes and behaviour, and the constant need to be `hip', is both endless and amusing. It reminds me of the line from The Big Chill when one of the main characters says "I'd hate to think it was all about fashion".

I remember people I used to know from the 1970's who were 'very cool' because they had tried LSD and sometimes used the word `man' at the ends of sentences. I have often wondered what on earth ever happened to these people, both men and women, as time passed and we all matured. Do they now have children and do they sometimes regret those earlier choices? Were they lucky enough to be one of the majority who suffered no long-term ill-effects?

Yet this epic story is about so much more. The second half of the text, which I just loved, follows their journey to Alaska where they try to set up a second Drop City. What an experiment and how idealistic is that? I have been to the Yukon and I found the descriptions and scenes to be true and accurate. I believe it captures the harshness and claustrophobia of an isolated Alaskan winter, probably an impossible and unimaginable chore for most of us. There was a reason why residents there generally used to refer to anywhere that is not the Yukon/Alaska as `The Outside', as the extreme conditions and environment simply cannot be matched anywhere else.

Most of the themes of Drop City have been covered before - eg Tom Wolfe - but I found this modern version to be both welcoming and humanising. I cannot help but wonder how history will judge this weird little sub-culture, long after all of us are gone, which flourished for a brief time and held such high, if not misguided, hopes.

An excellent read and recommended . 9/10.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 23, 2004
If you want to infuse your novel with bold ideas and controversy you could probably pick a better subject than the hippies. Sure, they were controversial at the time, with their utopian dreams and hedonistic lifestyle, but everybody pretty much agrees now that the whole thing was pretty much a waste of time. Therefore, it doesn't exactly come across as a revelation when one of this novel's hippies kills a deer in order to help feed the tribe, then notices later that the untended carcass is stinking and covered with flies. The symbolism is, to say the least, a bit obvious.

So perhaps you're not going to get a lot of deep meaning here, but otherwise this is an excellent novel; superbly written, with a great plot, true-to-life characters, and outstanding detail. It is also very engrossing and you'll find it is one of those that keeps you up deep, deep into the night.

The plot has to do with a commune of hippies, circa 1971, and the little paradise in northern California that has been created for them--Drop City--by an older dude who's come into an inheritance. They spend their days smoking dope and eating and dancing to rock and roll and making love and--just being, man. Some do chores and others don't and after a while they start to get on each other's nerves a little bit, even though they're not supposed to, being brothers and sisters and children of God and all of that. In any event, the police start making things uncomfortable for them because of their rather unsanitary and, well, lawless way of life, so they decide to split and head to Alaska, where everyone is truly free and no one will hassle them.

At the same time, the story is also about a backwoods type and some of the other rough-and-tumble characters who already live in Alaska. The woodsman makes some money by trapping and selling furs, but mostly he is occupied with the simple act of survival, particularly during the eight-month-long winter when the temperature goes to forty degrees below zero and stays there. Along with this hardship, there is the serious difficulty of the sheer boredom one must necessarily deal with when forced to stay indoors for long periods of time.

It is really great stuff. The author is very knowledgeable about both the hippie lifestyle and the outdoorsman lifestyle and both are peopled with vividly-drawn, believable characters. He maintains a neutral tone as well. Although one gets a good sense of the decrepitude and just plain silliness of the hippies, he is never condescending or belittling to them. At the same time, his treatment of the main Alaskan character is also even-handed, despite the growing admiration we begin to feel for the guy. It is almost impossible to describe the sense of delicious anticipation one feels when the hippies get on the bus and we know that these two wildly divergent segments of American culture are about to crash together.

It doesn't disappoint, with more than a few surprises along the way. Interestingly, the two have more in common than one might initially surmise, in that they both live on the edge of society, as it were, far away from the usual standards and expectations including the daily bath. Certain of the two groups form alliances with one another, the unscrupulous with the unscrupulous, the more altruistic with the more altruistic. Eventually, those left in the hippie camp adapt, more or less, but with much difficulty. And the natives start to tolerate them, more or less, but with some reluctance.

And this is where the trip summarily ends, a little breathlessly and a little bewilderingly. In the hippie camp it's still the middle of winter and they're bored out of their minds, infected with crab-lice and squabbling amongst themselves. The main Alaskan is able to resolve a problem in his life, but it is a problem which predated the hippies, and he's still got the rest of the winter to go, too. That's it, there's nothing left to say.

Therefore, in that the novel doesn't illuminate or expose some hidden or unknown truth, it really doesn't reach the level of masterpiece or even high art. But it is nevertheless very entertaining and well-crafted, and is in fact a fine piece of fiction.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2004
I was there, and I can tell you Boyle's descriptions of the pothead slackers of the sixties is dead on. If you want to know what life on the good ole hippy commune was like, get into this book. Boyle has a time machine all set for 1970. I kept wondering what happened to these characters as they entered the dot com revolution in their 40s. They certainly left the hippy era with a lot less illusions than they share in the romps of this novel. By the end, they get a good old dose of reality.
The writing is excellent, propelling and catchy with fine turns of literary phrase. Enough quality to keep this reader happy for 500+ pages. The characters are vivid, engaging, and up close and personal. I liked getting to know them, and I wanted more at the end. Always a very good sign. Not a lot happens, except the rigors of dealing with the wild, but that's life. For another novel with very similar themes and a hell of a good read too, try Adventures in the Alaskan Skin Trade by John Hawkes. Bear encounters, dogs in the snow, glaciers, and a get back to nature extravaganza in the Alaskan outback that will also hold you enthralled if not exactly encouraging about heading out in the wilderness with just your trusty blade.
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Top reviews from other countries

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Claudia Ullrich
5.0 out of 5 stars So viele Einblicke, so viel gelernt
Reviewed in Germany on February 19, 2019
T. C. BOYLE ist ja immer eine Bank, wie wir Österreicher sagen. Drop City ist schon ein ganz ordentliches Kaliber, mit richtig Umfang, aber jede Seite verdient es, gelesen zu werden. Der Autor lässt so tief in eine Hippie-Kommune blicken, dass man glaubt, man wäre dabei gewesen. Und das gleiche macht er auch mit dem freien, wilden Leben in Alaska. Anfangs wartet man schon nur darauf, dass diese zwei Welten aufeinander prallen und dann fiebert man mit, wie jeder es schafft, sein Leben zu bestreiten. Über die Schreibe von Boyle braucht man nichts zu sagen - formvollendet! Ich glaub, ich muss nochmal lesen!
3 people found this helpful
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in Canada on February 22, 2016
My favourite TC Boyle book! Absolutely hilarious and thoroughly entertaining; I've read it multiple times.
G. Woods
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 14, 2015
I loved getting lost in this novel
margarita
4.0 out of 5 stars Absage an naiven Idealismus ohne Tabus oder literarische Hemmungen
Reviewed in Germany on February 28, 2013
Boyle lässt hier auf bekannt-gekonnte Weise zwei Geschichten aufeinandertreffen und entfesselt dann Urkräft. Der Anfang ist aus meiner Sicht etwas langatmig, vielleicht für "Generation X" auch schon zu fremd. Ich kann nicht einfach in eine Hippie Welt einsteigen und mich sofort zuhause fühlen.

Zum einen die Hippie Kommune "Drop City", die er einerseits farbig und bunt beschreibt, aber auch kritisch betrachtet. Da gibt es die autentischen Hippies, denen es um die Sache geht, die aber auch auf eine gewisse Weise zu naiv durch die Welt laufen. Dann gibt es aber auch noch die "Pseudo-Hippies", die sich einfach auf den Hype stürzen, Drogen zu sich nehmen, freien Sex praktizieren, ohne dabei irgendwelche Verpflichtungen anzunehmen. Beispiel. Ronnie, der sich nur noch "Pan" nennt, große Sprüche klopft, aber untätig bei der Vergewaltigung einer 14jährigen zusieht und sich weigert in der komplett zugemüllten Kommune Latrinen zu graben.

Zum anderen moderne Siedler in Alaska: hier steig Boyle ganz stark ein, Menschen, die das starke Bedürfnis haben der Zivilisation zu entfliehen. Die sich einen Partner suchen - denn alleine geht es einfach nicht. Die in einer Natur, die einfach umwerfend und mächtig ist ihr Leben erkämpfen. Mit körperlicher Kraft, mit Willenskraft, mit Idealen, die nichts von Träumen haben. Träume lässt die Natur in Alaska nicht zu.

Das Buch nimmt in dem Moment eine rasante Dynamik auf, als die Gruppen aufeinander treffen. Die Kleinstadt Boynton in Alaska ist zunächst fassungslos, als diese Paradiesvögel auftauchen. Aber als die Fassungslosigkeit sich legt entsteht menschliche Dynamik - von normaler Freundschaft, Mitleid mit den kindähnlichen Idealisten bis hin zu abgrundtiefem Hass. Menschen verändern sich, Hippies werden zu Trappern, normale Bewohner der Wildnis stellen fest, dass sie die menschliche Nähe der Hippies so sehr brauchen. Und in dieser Dynamik brilliert Boyle. Wie immer nimmt er kein Blatt vor den Mund, ob es um Sex, Mord oder Naturgewalten geht - mit der ihm eigenen Sprachgewalt und Finesse malt er ein Bild in das man einfach versinken muss.

Fazit: nicht mein Lieblings-Boyle, insbesondere "Water Music" ist für mich das non-plus-ultra weil es vom Thema her wichtiger ist (die Erkundung des Nigers durch Mungo Park) und noch viel tabuloser, atemberaubender und gewaltiger ist. Aber trotzdem ein richtig gutes Buch, das sich zu lesen lohnt.
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Redglass
5.0 out of 5 stars Gripping stuff
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 29, 2018
I haven't finished it yet, though I am close to the end, and it's an indication of the book's quality that even though the characters are holed up in Alaska, the ending isn't easy to predict. Boyle's writing is a highly enjoyable blend of satire and compassion: he nails the childish illusions of his characters (and sometimes their downright nastiness) but he never forgets they are people, whose feelings are as important to them as the readers are to him/her. This is the third Boyle novel I've read and I'm so happy to have discovered him.
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