Pubdate: Thu, 15 Nov 2001 Source: Eugene Weekly (OR) Copyright: 2001 Eugene Weekly Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/136 Website: http://www.eugeneweekly.com/ Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n000/a224.html and http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1909/a08.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?345 (Hallucinogens) NO FURTHER Ken Kesey Remembered, Right Down To The Bone. An issue of The New York Times Book Review, dated Nov.11 but printed long before it was known Ken Kesey was seriously ill, carries a full-page ad by Bauman Rare Books of New York City: "Ken Kesey. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. 1962. First edition. 'Boldly inscribed by Kesey.' $7,800." It is the fourth-highest priced of 32 books listed. Topping the list is a first edition of Uncle Tom's Cabin for $12,500. A first edition of Treasure Island, $9,000. The Ancient Mariner, a copy owned by Ernest Shackleton, is offered for $8,500. Not bad company. News of Kesey's death has garnered nearly as much newspaper space in New York City as it has in Eugene. A 2,000-word obit with photo ran in the NYT Sunday edition Nov. 11, followed by a NYT editorial Nov. 13. His life was noteworthy to not only our little Oregon community, but to generations of truth-seekers on both sides of the Atlantic. OK, he may be looking down at us from Cloud 9 laughing at such accolades, but hey, we need heroes. Kesey will do just fine until someone else comes along and ratchets open our consciousness with playful irreverence. Local media have tended to pussyfoot around Kesey's LSD use, mentioning it in passing as though it were only a youthful indiscretion. After all, we spend billions today battling the drug trade and incarcerating users. The NYT obit is more complete and more honest, describing Kesey's writing under the influence of hallucinogenic drugs, and his annual Easter Sunday LSD hike up Mount Pisgah near his home. "The past few years that's been about the only time I've taken acid and even then not much. Just enough to make the leaves dapple," the obit says, quoting an April interview in The Times Union of Albany, N.Y. In an EW cover story Oct. 5, 2000, Kesey said, "We try to uphold the psychedelic movement. We have not backed off." How important were drugs to opening up and stimulating Kesey's powers of observation and his poetic writing? We don't know, but we do know that the psychedelic movement is about more than just drugs. It's about stepping out of conventional thinking and perceiving. It's about tossing out the limits our society has placed on what is normal. Kesey was an inspired writer and charismatic character long before he volunteered for drug experiments at Menlo Park Veterans Hospital and began his psychedelic journey. Millions of people have taken LSD, but only Kesey has blessed us with characters like Randle McMurphy, Chief Broom, Nurse Ratched, the Stamper family and Little Tricker the Squirrel. Kesey lived an artistic and intellectual life that changed the world a bit, and for the better. We can't ask more of any man or woman. His literary works will remain with us as reference points as we try to wrap our minds around his life -- and our own gifted lives. He lived among us, and we're grateful he took us along on his curious and unforgettable path. His close friend and fellow Prankster Ken Babbs has this to say about him on the family web site, http://www.intrepidtrips.com: "A great good friend and great husband and father and granddad, he will be sorely missed, but if there is one thing he would want us to do, it would be to carry on his life's work. Namely, to treat others with kindness and if anyone does you dirt forgive that person right away. This goes beyond the art, the writing, the performances, even the bus. Right down to the bone." - -- TJT - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk