The Wild Boys (novel)

The Wild Boys: A Book of the Dead  

1st edition cover
Author(s) William S. Burroughs
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Grove Press
Publication date 1971
Media type Print (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages 184 pp (HB)
ISBN ISBN 0-394-47586-0 (HB)
OCLC Number 222299
Dewey Decimal 813/.5/4
LC Classification PZ4.B972 Wi PS3552.U75

The Wild Boys (full title The Wild Boys: A Book of the Dead) is a novel written by Beat Generation author William S. Burroughs. It was first published in 1971 by Grove Press.

Contents

Introduction

The book is structured as a series of loosely-connected vignettes, intertwined by sections (called "The Penny Arcade Peep Show") written in a process of free association and stream-of-consciousness. It is settled in an apocalyptic near-future, and the main plot shows the struggle between the wild boys - a revolutionary tribe of youths, living in a instinctual state existing outside the conventions of civilization, and free from mechanisms of social control like religion, nation and family - and the remnants of civilization itself, living an hedonistic and paranoic existence in totalitarian enclaves.

Themes

The book embody themes like the idea of youths escaping from social control, anonymous sexuality, and shamanism.

Film adaptation

Russell Mulcahy wanted to direct a film adaptation, and talked to Duran Duran about writing the soundtrack in the same way that Queen did for Mulcahy's Highlander in 1986, but the project never came to fruition.[1]

Allusions in other works

References

  1. ^ a b VH1 interview with John Taylor
  2. ^ Christopher Sandford, Bowie: Loving The Alien. Da Capo Press, 2003, 1998. ISBN 978-0-306-80854-8
  3. ^ Hitchcock, Soft Boys Still Rock Hard
  4. ^ Jon Savage on Ian Curtis's reading