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Books - Naked Lunch


Naked Lunch (alternately titled The Naked Lunch in some editions) is a novel by William S. Burroughs.

It was the third novel he wrote, but was the second of his novels to see publication. First published in 1959, it did not become widely popular until the 1960s.

It is also the title of a film loosely based upon the novel and other Burroughs writings that was directed by David Cronenberg and released in 1991.

The book

Naked Lunch is considered Burroughs' seminal work, and one of the landmark publications in the history of American literature. Extremely controversial in both its subject matter and its use of (often obscene) language, the book was banned in many regions of the United States, and was one of the last American books to actually be put on trial for obscenity. The book was first published in France in 1959 by the infamous Olympia Press; an English-language edition by Grove Press followed soon after.

Naked Lunch consists of many loosely-related vignettes in which several characters such as the sadistic, sociopathic and borderline incompetent Dr. Benway reappear. The primary character (one might say the main character), is agent Bill Lee (a pseudonym for Burroughs — Lee was his mother's maiden name; Burroughs also appears in Kerouac's On the Road
as "Old Bull Lee" and used the pseudonym William Lee for his first novel, Junkie
).

The book's structure anticipates the cut-up technique Burroughs would later employ in later novels such as the so-called "Nova Trilogy" (The Soft Machine
, The Ticket That Exploded
, and Nova Express
). The stories draw from his experiences in Tangier and his life in America and Mexico, as well as a tour through South America he undertook after shooting his common-law wife Joan Vollmer in the head while playing a drunken game of William Tell. Throughout this period he became addicted to several drugs (notably heroin and morphine). The novel's mix of taboo fantasies, peculiar creatures (like the predatory Mugwumps), and eccentric personalities all serve to unmask mechanisms and processes of control; to "reveal what is at the end of every fork." The title was suggested by Burroughs's friend Jack Kerouac. The novel is a particularly grand illustration of Burroughs's skill with dialogue. Poet Allen Ginsberg, Burroughs' close friend and sometime lover, refers to Naked Lunch in his introduction to his epic poem "Howl".

The book was banned in some parts of the world for approximately ten years, though it found a quick release in France where Olympia Press published it soon after completion. The first American publisher to take a chance with the novel was Grove Press. The book was banned by Boston courts in 1962 due to obscenity (notably child murder in pedophilic acts), but that decision was reversed in a landmark 1966 opinion by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. This was the last major literary censorship battle in the US.

Upon publication, Grove Press added to the book supplementary material regarding the censorship battle as well as an article written by Burroughs on the topic of drug addiction.

The book contains what is generally considered to be some of Burroughs' most memorable and quoted passages. One of the most quoted is a section (or, to use Burroughs' terminology, a "routine") known as "The Talking Asshole". This story-within-a-story involves a man who teaches his anal orifice to talk, a trick he soon regrets when it develops a personality and mind of its own and eventually takes over the man's body. Notable recordings and performances of this routine include Frank Zappa reading it during 1978's The Nova Convention (it was recorded and released by Giorno Poetry Systems), by Burroughs himself in his mid-1990s CD Spare Ass Annie and Other Tales, and it is quoted virtually verbatim by Peter Weller's character in the film version of Naked Lunch.

In 2002, a "restored text" edition of Naked Lunch was published, with some new and previously suppressed material added.

Trivia

  • Burroughs wrote Naked Lunch in room #9 of the Hotel el Muniria in Tangier. Today, photos of Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac and other beat generation poets hang on the walls of the adjoining bar, the Tangerinn.
  • Some early European editions of the book are entitled The Naked Lunch as was the British 1969 paperback edition by Corgi Books but the article was dropped for American editions.
  • In 1989, Burroughs published Interzone
    , a collection of short stories and other writings including a chapter entitled "WORD" that at one time was considered for inclusion in Naked Lunch. According to some sources, Burroughs original title for the novel Naked Lunch was also Interzone.
  • The British science fiction magazine Interzone obviously gets its name from Naked Lunch.
  • The music group Steely Dan takes its name from a dildo mentioned in Naked Lunch. The music group Clem Snide also takes its name from a character in Naked Lunch.
  • In 1994, the band Bomb The Bass released their album Clear which contains a track called "Bug Powder Dust". The lyrics of that song contain a lot of references to characters, places and actions that are part of the book.
  • Several characters in this book would reappear in many later works, most notably the surgeon Dr. Benway, Clem Snide "the Private Asshole", and Inspector Lee.
  • An episode of the TV series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation includes a character named Dr. Benway in one episode.
  • In the 1984 Alex Cox film, Repo Man, there is a hospital scene in which Dr. Benway is paged.
  • Numerous recordings of Burroughs reading excerpts from Naked Lunch have been released over the years, as well as a full audio book version issued a few years before his death.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Naked Lunch ]



Some related entries: Crow | The Stars Look Down | The Tie That Binds | The Right Stuff | Aristoi | Emeka | 1823 in literature | A Berlin Republic | An Assassin's Diary | The Third Chimpanzee | 1817 in literature

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