Pubdate: Tue, 13 Nov 2001
Source: New York Times (NY)
Section: Editorial/Op-Ed
Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298

THE PRANKSTER'S DEATH

Some names come trailing behind them not a sense of the person but an idea 
of something larger, a time, a possibility, an actual shift in the ways of 
being. Ken Kesey's is a name like that. The man it belonged to died 
Saturday at 66, after complications following liver surgery. Mr. Kesey was 
only 27 when his first novel, "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," was 
published, a book that began the making of his reputation. People will be 
arguing about the meaning of that reputation for years to come, even as it 
grows more and more elusive.

Mr. Kesey's creativity was never limited to the written page. His other 
muse was collaborative, committed to the swift transformations of the 
moment. For a time a drug -- LSD -- seemed to give those transformations a 
kinetic reality. The story of Mr. Kesey's first encounter with LSD in 1959, 
as a volunteer in an experiment, has acquired the aura of legend. Depending 
on your point of view, he was a guinea pig, a trickster or a criminal. He 
was, in any case, one of the figures responsible for bringing LSD out of 
the realm of national security, where it was being studied by the C.I.A. 
and the Army, and into the realm of the public. In the "acid tests" he held 
at La Honda, Calif., in the hills above Palo Alto, he and his friends 
created much of the aesthetic context that came to define the LSD 
experience as that generation knew it -- a mix of music, lights, nature, 
the surprises of consciousness, and the trip-long drift of interpersonal 
connections.

To think back to 1964, the year that he and Neal Cassady and the Merry 
Pranksters drove across America and back in a Day-Glo bus, is to remember a 
far-off country. It was one of those transcendent moments that ultimately 
seemed to conspire with the time, just as the time was changing.

Jack Kerouac went on the road, but that was a private trip. Mr. Kesey 
mapped the road out for the rest of us, whether we took it or not, whether 
we found him merry or not, whether we liked his kind of pranks or not. The 
Kesey road began in La Honda, where for years afterward you could still 
feel the echo of the acid tests, and it eventually led everywhere.
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MAP posted-by: Beth