The Pump House Gang

by Tom Wolfe

Paperback, 1968

Status

Available

Call number

917.303923

Collection

Publication

New York: Bantam, 1969

Description

Tom Wolfe's second collection (1968) takes it title from a redoubtable surfing elite, many of whom abandoned the beach for the psychedelic indoor sports of the late sixties. Wolfe here continues his fieldwork among noble savages, from La Jolla to London.

User reviews

LibraryThing member figre
The biggest problem with this collection is probably also its strongest asset – it is just too much Tom Wolfe of the Sixties. It is far too jazzy/happening/groovy (no, he never stoops to that word). It is far too Gonzo (yes, I know that’s a different author.) And ultimately, it is often far too
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unintelligible as Wolfe confirms his ultimate hipness. Age has not been kind to these essays. There are far too many pop references, and far too much use of popster speak, to make them all relevant. And, these problems mean that, even if you are just attacking them to immerse yourself in that time for old times sake, it may not work. I often read these Sixties essays to get a feel for the Zeitgeist. Well, this time there are too many geists that have been overcome by zeit. (Look it up, it will make sense.) The opening essay “The Pump House Gang” (about surfers and their society) means almost nothing anymore. Other essays contain far too much about the English, the New York advertising establishment, and upper-class snobbery (all burning topics in the Sixties, but not quite the same any more.) In fact, some of these discussions seem almost naïve. (Easy to be brilliant in the future, isn’t it?)

Yet, don’t throw it on the waste bin. There are still some essays that can speak to today, or tell us something about that past. The piece on Marshall McLuhan (“The medium is the message”. Please tell me you have heard of that. I’m feeling really old today) titled “What If He Is Right?” raises a fascinating question because, as you read this, you know he WAS right. And, he is still right. And you should begin asking yourself, “What does this mean for me in a new century?” and “What would Marshall do?” The essay “The Life & Hard Times of a Teenage Society Girl” reminds us that things never change. The social situations of teenagers, although there are different scares and different concerns and different…everything, really hasn’t changed. Then there is also “The Put-Together Girl” which lets us know what it was like when the muskets were first being fired in the sexual revolution as exhibited by one of the first strippers to get “Significant” augmentation, and the fascinating “King of the Status Dropouts” which visits Hugh Hefner and gives us a view of how thin the line of psychosis is – that thin line that separated Hefner from Howard Hughes.

However, even these often suffer from the style of writing. (Why is it that reading Hunter Thompson, someone who really went out there when he wrote, doesn’t feel as antiquated or unintelligible?) The pieces indicated above make it worth wading through, but it can get a little deep sometimes.
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LibraryThing member guhlitz
Cameron Crow just may have been inspired to do his lifes work by reading this one piece of collected short stories based on Thomas Wolfe's direct style of information gathering and documentery-esque stylings.. Experiencing the life intended to be written about, hanging out with the subject matter
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and personalities inevetably depicted in his colorful storytelling manner.....In Hunter S. Thompson's world it is called Gonzo Journalism....
From the hardcore local surf scene in the late sixties WindanSea, La Jolla (the pumphouse gange) to the lazy Chicago era life of Hugh Hefner....These stories are crafted simply and without apology, still holding much relevance today.
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LibraryThing member dbsovereign
If you like Wolfe's brand of social criticism, this is a vintage collection. Satire, wit abound and you can always count on him to capture speech in its essence.
LibraryThing member DinadansFriend
A Series of short pieces from New York, Magazine. Quite entertaining but not numbered among his important books. The matter deals with some curious personalities who hang out on the same surfing beach in California in the Sixties. Less fun than "Gidget " the movie that covers the same ground.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1968

Physical description

244 p.; 18 cm

ISBN

0553047167 / 9780553047165
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