Skip to content
Gems Press

Gems Press

Books Worth Remembering

  • Home
  • Books Worth Remembering from Gems Press
  • Classic True Stories
  • Books to Read Free
  • Selected Graphics
  • Shop
  • Toggle search form

Interviews with Icons: Flashing on the Sixties • by Lisa Law

Posted on February 17, 2022 By Gayla

☀   You can borrow and read Interviews with Icons free below.   ☀

You may not know who some of Lisa Law‘s 60s-icons interviewees are, but you will enjoy the trip inside their heads. These are some interesting minds who have done some astonishing things: Taj Mahal, Allen Ginsberg, Timothy Leary, Ram Dass, Mickey Hart, Peter Coyote, and 20 or so more.

counterculture icons reminisce about the sixties

Lisa Law is a skillful interviewer who brings out the shining personalities and wild reminiscences of these counterculture trailblazers, as she talks to them about the 60s. Spiritual teacher Stephen Gaskin describes how the community he helped found, the Farm, ran on solid psychedelic tripping principles. Poet Allen Gisberg plays word association with Lisa Law. Mountain Girl (Jerry Garcia’s wife) talks about psychedelics and why she isn’t taking them at the moment. Here’s an excerpt from a Wavy Gravy interview:

Lisa: How did you happen to be living at the Hog Farm?

Wavy: What it was is Kesey was on the lam in Mexico, and we were doing a traveling road show, Can You Pass the Acid Test?, with a band called The Grateful Dead. And Life magazine was shooting us all for their cover, and people were posing away, and Ken Babbs stole the bus and took off to join Kesey in Mexico. So my wife then, Bonnie Jean, and I were living in a two-room cabin in Sunland, California, and suddenly we had thirty or forty houseguests. And the landlord came by and said forty-two people is too many people for a two-room cabin. And we sort of concurred from there out. We were being evicted, but in the life-in-the-bizarre-lane of kitchen synchronicity, along came Bud Pelsue and said, “Old Saul up on that mountain, he’s had a stroke, and they need somebody to slop them hogs.” I remember driving up in the dead of night to check out the venue, and there was Burbank laid at our feet like luminous jewels on a field of black velvet. And I stood on this knoll to get a better look, and the knoll stood up and starting walking with me on its back. It was this big old black sow. Forty-eight hog farmers a year are devoured by their livestock, so I remember feeding them in groups of two.

Lisa: And then one of those little babies became Pigasus.

Wavy: We ran a pig for President, it’s true, in 1968. We had no idea when we went on the road, with one pig to remember our humble beginnings, that she would be the first female black-and-white candidate for the presidency and would require her own truck and several body servants.

borrow or buy this ebook about counterculture icons

You can borrow and read the book Interviews with Icons: Flashing on the Sixties free via the nonprofit Internet Archive or buy* it from Amazon.

*As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

books Tags:people

Post navigation

Previous Post: Alfred Hitchcock as a Boy: He Smelled of Fish
Next Post: Charles Demers Explains His Panic Attacks

Related Posts

Sex Tips for Girls • by Cynthia Heimel books
Passport to Magonia: On UFOs, Folklore, and Parallel Worlds • by Jacques Vallée books
The Brother Cadfael Medieval Mystery Series, by Ellis Peters books
Deep Green Resistance: Strategy to Save the Planet • by Derrick Jensen, Aric McBay, and Lierre Keith books
The Holographic Universe • by Michael Talbot books
Food: Vegetarian Home Cooking • by Mary McCartney books

A Premium from Gems Press

Sign up for our mailing list (all it takes is your email address), and get a free PDF of the first 70 pages of the Gems Press book, Courtly Quips & Gentry Gems: The Best of Early English Wit*.

Recent Posts

  • The Farm: A Manual of Practical Agriculture: How to Cultivate All the Field Crops
  • The Barn-yard: A Manual of Cattle, Horse and Sheep Husbandry: How to Breed and Rear the Various Species of Domestic Animals
  • The Garden: A Manual of Practical Horticulture: How to Cultivate Vegetables, Fruits, and Flowers
  • The Scent of Flowers and Leaves: Its Purpose and Relation to Man
  • The New Religion: A Gospel of Love
  • American Communities: Societies, New and Old, Communistic, Semi-Communistic and Co-operative: A Look at 19th-Century Intentional Communities
  • Society Sensations: True Tales of Love, Scandal and Divorce in Victorian and Edwardian England
  • Famous Morganatic Marriages: True Stories of Forbidden Romance and Scandal in Europe’s Royal Houses
  • Help with Using HTML to Make Kindle Books
  • Selected Graphic Elements
  • Selected Graphics: Decaying Daguerreotypes by Mathew Brady, Circa 1850
  • Selected Graphics: Dante’s Divine Comedy
  • Selected Graphics: Grunty Animals from The Flower of Nature, Circa 1350
  • More Great Books to Read for Free
  • Selected Graphics from The Black Cat, September 1905
  • Selected Graphics from The Black Cat, October 1904
  • About Gems Press
  • The Book of Glimmer: Adventures of Marcus & Stub
  • Courtly Quips & Gentry Gems: The Best of Early English Wit
  • A Collection of Tracts, on the Subjects of Taxing the British Colonies in America, and Regulating Their Trade.: Volume I
  • Gem’s Fascinating Leisure Reader: Volume One
  • Gem’s Fascinating Leisure Reader: Volume Two
  • Health in Your Homes, by J. Fletcher Horne
  • The House I Live In, by J.W. Ford, M.D.
  • How to Work, by Amos R. Wells
  • The Brother Cadfael Medieval Mystery Series, by Ellis Peters
  • List of 63 More Great Books You Can Read for Free
  • Sex Tips for Girls • by Cynthia Heimel
  • Books About Sleep That You Can Borrow
  • French Horn Hell

*As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.

Sign up for our mailing list and get a free PDF of the first 70 pages of the Gems Press book, Courtly Quips & Gentry Gems: The Best of Early English Wit.*

About Gems Press

Contact us at contact (at) gemspress.earth

Copyright © 2025 Gems Press.

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs