The book itself was funny and a good story. Essentially the book is a story about a boy named Willie/Will who is a UCSC college student who, instead of completing his master's thesis in the past two years, has instead gotten stoned and hooked up with all different sorts of girls. In short, a college degenerate.
Things start to take an interesting turn, however, after he finds the biggest "shroom" of his life when "cow-tripping"- essentially looking for mushrooms to get you high that grow off cow-manure. When his drug-dealing friend gets busted, it falls to him to deliver the drugs to the Renaissance Faire a ways up the California coast. The various misadventures he encounters on the way include no less than getting arrested, having a threesome with one girl he's never met and his Teacher's Assistant, and ruining a comedic production of Romeo and Juliet. Mingled in with all this, every other chapter is devoted to the real Will Shakespeare and his own life as a womanizer. The book reaches a climax when their two lives coincide, and both are changed forever.
The recommendation is a little harder here than for most of my reads. I really enjoyed this book because of the tons of Shakespeare quotes and Latin. I know that that isn't necessarily an enhancing factor for most people, so that's to consider. Also, the book has many, many references to drugs, and steamy sex scenes that rival hardcore romance novels. So, definitely not for small children (watch out for Henry), but for any other teenagers and adults, you could read a bit into it and then stop if you don't like it. Barring those things, the book is actually a really great read and has some interesting points to consider at the end, especially for teenage males.
Where did the Latin quotes enter in? I'm trying to decide whether to read this or not - you said it's funny and a good story - but is it good for adults and is it memorable? I like your descrition of the book, but would like to have a sense of how much meat is in it - or is it just an unpretentious howl that's fun to read?
ReplyDeleteLatin quotes were because Shakespeare was apparently a Latin teacher at book's beginning, and they also entered in because they make quotes from Catholicism... It's a whole subplot dealing with whether Shakespeare was Catholic, and I should have talked more about it in the review.
ReplyDeleteHm... Good for adults? I'd really only say that the ending has any meaning that would be good for the adults, the rest of the book is just sort of a howl. So I guess it's your call, but if you're looking for something serious you should probably look elsewhere.
sounds interesting. i wonder what west coast Renaissance Faire (Renn Fayre)this book was alluding to... any idea if the author was a Reedie? a Latin-loving party-hard protagonist reminds me of some people i know
ReplyDeleteI appreciate the advice about Henry. We'll keep him away from this.
ReplyDeletePlus the bits in Latin will be way over his head.
ReplyDeleteColin: well-played.
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