Psychedelic Refugee: The League for Spiritual Discovery, the 1960s Cultural Revolution, and 23 Years on the Run

by Rosemary Woodruff Leary

Other authorsDavid F. Phillips (Editor)
Paperback, 2021

Status

Available

Call number

154.4

Collection

Publication

Park Street Press (2021), 352 pages

Description

A memoir by one of the original female psychedelic pioneers of the 1960s * Shares Rosemary's early experimentation with psychedelics in the 1950s, her development through the psychedelic revolution of the 1960s, and her involvement, at first exciting but then heartbreaking, with Dr. Timothy Leary * Describes her LSD trips with Leary, their time at the famous Millbrook estate, their experiences as fugitives abroad, including their captivity by the Black Panthers in Algeria, and Rosemary's years on the run after she and Timothy separated One of the original female psychedelic pioneers, Rosemary Woodruff Leary (1935-2002) began her psychedelic journey long before her relationship with Dr. Timothy Leary. In the 1950s, she moved to New York City where she became part of the city's most advanced music, art, and literary circles and expanded her consciousness with psilocybin mushrooms and peyote. In 1964 she met two former Harvard professors who were experimenting with LSD, Timothy Leary and Ralph Metzner, who invited her to join them at the Millbrook estate in upstate New York. Once at Millbrook, Rosemary went on to become the wife--and accomplice--of the man Richard Nixon called "the most dangerous man in America." In this intimate memoir, Rosemary describes her LSD experiences and insights, her decades as a fugitive hiding both abroad and underground in America, and her encounters with many leaders of the cultural and psychedelic milieu of the 1960s. Compiled from Rosemary's own letters and autobiographical writings archived among her papers at the New York Public Library, the memoir details Rosemary's imprisonment for contempt of court, the Millbrook raid by G. Gordon Liddy, the tours with Timothy before his own arrest and imprisonment, and their time in exile following his sensational escape from a California prison. She describes their surreal and frightening captivity by the Black Panther Party in Algeria and their experiences as fugitives in Switzerland. She recounts her adventures and fears as a fugitive on five continents after her separation from Timothy in 1971. While most accounts of the psychedelic revolution of the 1960s have been told by men, with this memoir we can now experience these events from the perspective of a woman who was at the center of the seismic cultural changes of that time.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member pomo58
Psychedelic Refugee by Rosemary Woodruff Leary is a fascinating document of both the 1960s and the aftermath filtered through the lens of an amazing woman.

While this is a memoir in the sense that the words are indeed Leary's, this is more like going through well-ordered archives. Most of the book
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is fairly coherent as a story of her life but even then the editor had to help put the remaining pieces of what she had written into a form readers might find interesting.

If you lived this period you will relate to much of what she talks about even though most of us experimented on a much smaller level. Reading this made me dig out my old weathered copy of The Psychedelic Experience and remember (as best I could) those days of thinking the world might actually be malleable in a positive direction. Now, well, I am just short of giving up on such hopes, nothing positive will be noticeable during what is left of my lifetime.

I will warn some readers. This is not a polished memoir that Leary had the opportunity to edit until publication, this is in some ways a recovered document (collection of documents). So if you read memoirs for entertainment and want an easy narrative to follow, this may disappoint you. That said, if you are genuinely interested in the period and in the people, this is like reading primary documents in an archive. You will gain a great deal of insight and there is plenty to enjoy if you don't mind the work.

I would most highly recommend this to people who either remember those times and want a deeper understanding or those who are truly interested in the period. For general readers of memoirs, this may be more hit or miss since it is more disjointed than what you may be used to. But it is well worth the time if you have the interest.

Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

352 p.; 9 inches

ISBN

1644111802 / 9781644111802

Local notes

This is a fantastic book! Rosemary is a fascinating person, who writes extremely well utilizing poetic imagery, irony, feminist outrage, and clever linguistic quirks and plays on words. She knew or at least encountered many famous people of the 1960's countercultural revolution. She spent the years 1970- 1994 on the run as a fugitive who had helped break her husband Timothy Leary from prison.
Also noteworthy about this book is the Editor David Philips' skillful manner of weaving together the fragmentary sources left among Rosemary's personal papers at the New York Library's archive. He is very transparent about how he linked together the surviving manuscripts to make this story, following a timeline Rosemary assembled. His footnotes, appendices, and notations are exemplary.
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