The author recounts his hilarious experiences growing up as the son of a leader of the New Age movement of the 1970s, casting a sober eye on the hilarious beliefs and antics of his father and his hangers on. Reprint.
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From the Publisher:
Great Review in Publisher's Weekly
Named for the astronomer who deemed the Earth to be the center of the universe, Tompkins, as related in this gripping memoir, grew up in the orbit of his own personal center of the universe-- his father Peter Tompkins, the eccentric co-author of the 1970s runaway bestseller The Secret Life of Plants. An Allied spy during WWII, Peter (who at age four had changed his name from Laurence to Peter, after Peter Pan) became an author who specialized in revealing secret knowledge. Catapulted into the national spotlight with his book on plants while in his early 50s, "New Age avatar" Peter was a white-bearded fellow in khaki bush jacket, an authoritative figure dedicated to proving that the impossible was really possible. According to Ptolemy, Peter "was the one to suggest that ancient astronauts had visited the earth" and "that the ancient Egyptians possessed magical techniques for levitating twenty-thousand-pound rocks." As Ptolemy recreates the fascinating world he grew up in, he also cleverly, if sometimes heavy-handedly, describes how "sons who spent too much time in the shade of their fathers ended up not as trees but as mushrooms." His response to his father’s egocentrism and to the seductiveness of his father’s world was to find his own hidden, magical realm through drugs and alcohol. Tompkins’s writing is vivid throughout, but particularly so in describing daily life caught in the viselike grip of addiction. His father’s "lifelong love of secrets" apparently yielded a family with several of them, which Tompkins exposes with clear-eyed honesty and hard-won wisdom.
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- PublisherBard
- Publication date1998
- ISBN 10 0380790629
- ISBN 13 9780380790623
- BindingPaperback
- Number of pages286
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Rating