Further Reading

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  • Burroway, Janet. Review of "Last Go Round," by Ken Kesey. New York Times Book Review (10 July 1994): 11. (Burroway discusses the strengths and weaknesses of Last Go Round.)
  • Clark, Meg. Review of "Last Go Round," by Ken Kesey. Whole Earth Review 88 (winter 1995): 63. (Clark praises Kesey's inventiveness in Last Go Round and comments that “Kesey has once again stepped out of his norm.”)
  • Cooper, Marc. "Return of the Rebel." Maclean's 99, no. 44 (3 November 1986): 8, 10. (Cooper highlights the parallels between Kesey's prose style and cinematic techniques in Demon Box as well as the collection's anti-establishment politics.)
  • Gelb, Hal. Review of "Twister," by Ken Kesey. Nation 259, no. 17 (21 November 1994): 625-28. (Gelb compares the themes, characters, and style of Twister to the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz.)
  • Gilmore, Mikal. "Ken Kesey's Great American Trip." Rolling Stone, nos. 885-886 (27 December 2001-3 January 2002): 58-62, 144. (Gilmore chronicles the cultural impact of Kesey's life experiences, including testimonials from author Tom Wolfe, the Grateful Dead's Bob Weir, and the Hell's Angels's Sonny Barger.)
  • Lehmann-Haupt, Christopher. Review of "Last Go Round," by Ken Kesey. New York Times (7 July 1994): C18. (Lehmann-Haupt offers a generally positive assessment of Last Go Round.)
  • McMillen, Liz. "Ken Kesey Weaves His Magic Spell, Turns Graduates of Creative Writing at U. of Oregon into Published Authors." Chronicle of Higher Education 36, no. 18 (17 January 1990): A15, A22-A23. (McMillen recounts the conception and publication of Caverns, a novel collectively written and published by Kesey's students at the University of Oregon in 1989.)
  • Sinclair, Iain. "Suet and Swimsuits." New Statesman 14, no. 2950 (9 October 1987): 29. (Sinclair examines the tone and characters of Demon Box.)
  • Sodowsky, Gargi Roysirar, and Roland E. Sodowsky. "Different Approaches to Psychopathology and Symbolism in the Novel and Film One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest." Literature and Psychology 37, nos. 1-2 (1991): 34-42. (Sodowsky and Sodowsky compare the perspectives on psychopathology and symbolism in the prose and cinematic versions of One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest.)
  • Veeder, Mary Harris. "A Shelf of Memory Makers." Chicago Tribune Books (11 November 1990): 6-7. (Veeder comments on the subject matter and style of Little Tricker the Squirrel Meets Big Double the Bear.)
  • Waxler, Robert P. "The Mixed Heritage of the Chief: Revisiting the Problem of Manhood in One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest." Journal of Popular Culture 29, no. 3 (winter 1995): 225-35. (Waxler explicates the significance of Chief Bromden's gender and mixed heritage in One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest in terms of the patriarchal values that defined mid-twentieth-century American culture.)

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Kesey, Ken (Vol. 6)

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