Ratings8
Average rating4
"It is 1970, and a down-at-the-heels California commune devoted to peace, free love and the simple life has decided to relocate to the last frontier - the unforgiving landscape of interior Alaska - in the ultimate expression of going back to the land.
The novel opposes two groups of characters: Sess Harder, his wife, Pamela, and other young Alaskans who are already successfully homesteading in the wilderness, and the brothers and sisters of "Drop City," led by Norm Sander and three idealistic emigres from the east coast, Star, her boyfriend, Marco, and Ronnie.
As these two communities collide, unexpected friendships and dangerous enmities are born as everyone struggles with the bare essentials of life: love, nourishment and a roof over one's head."--BOOK JACKET.
Reviews with the most likes.
Drop City tells the story of a group of hippies who, in 1970, leave their California commune to attempt to start a new one in Alaska.
Author TC Boyle seems to have a gift for language - the book's written well - but the story is a bit of a meandering mess and lacks the charm of other anti-nostalgic looks at the era (Mad Men, for example).
None of the Drop City characters are in the least bit sympathetic. They're a bunch of spoiled, irresponsible children who are so reflexively antagonistic to “The Man” that they overlook things like child endangerment and rape, and who survive only through the privilege of their landscape and the charity of the US government. Boyle contrasts their fantasy of being “off the grid” with the reality of the Alaskan community, which could be interesting, but because we're not given any reason to care about the DCers, or see them as three-dimensional characters, none of the contrast is really able to raise any real interest.