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"Coming of age during the turbulent late 1960s, long-haired Ben Tucker is a college student in Boston, but his passions are rebelling against the Vietnam war and making his long-distance relationship with Sarah work despite disapproving parents, violent protests, and legal issues. From dope-smoking freaks to militant Weathermen and all the roiling emotions of youth culture at odds with the establishment, the Risk of Being Ridiculous has the raucous pedigree of the 60s yet resonates with events well into the 21st Century. As tumultuous as the voyage of young radicals can be, the book is infused with the sweet love story between the two lovers"--…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Coming of age during the turbulent late 1960s, long-haired Ben Tucker is a college student in Boston, but his passions are rebelling against the Vietnam war and making his long-distance relationship with Sarah work despite disapproving parents, violent protests, and legal issues. From dope-smoking freaks to militant Weathermen and all the roiling emotions of youth culture at odds with the establishment, the Risk of Being Ridiculous has the raucous pedigree of the 60s yet resonates with events well into the 21st Century. As tumultuous as the voyage of young radicals can be, the book is infused with the sweet love story between the two lovers"--
Autorenporträt
Guy Maynard lived in New Bedford, Massachusetts for his first thirteen years, spent his high school years in Urbana, Illinois, went to two years of college in Boston, and has lived in Oregon since the early 1970s. He was lead singer in a teen rock and roll band, was active in the civil rights and anti-Vietnam War movements, lived on a commune in southern Oregon, worked as a carpenter, and was a member of a worker-owned construction company.After receiving his degree in journalism from the University of Oregon in 1984, he was editor of a small community newspaper and then worked on a number of trade magazines in such fields as liquid and gas chromatography and geographic information systems. He was editor of Oregon Quarterly, the University of Oregon magazine, He co-edited the 2003 collection, Best Essays NW; and his essays and articles have appeared in several northwest regional publications. He lives with his wife Shelley in a 1930s-vintage house in the middle of Eugene, Oregon. They have a grown son, Corey. This is his first novel.