Michael Moorcock, Hippie Prince and science fiction writer

*I dunno why the layout on these webpages is so lousy, but that article's awesome.

http://newstaging.spectator.widearea.co.uk/books/6215098/hero-of-the-counterculture.thtml

(...)

...he was sent first to a Steiner school, where he acquired ‘a morbid terror of vegetarianism’ and was the first pupil to be expelled, then to a prep school in Norbury, and finally and somewhat inexplicably to a Pitman’s College, which he left at 15, to earn his living by his leaky Osmiroid.

The Final Programme made him a star of the counterculture, and he performed with Hawkwind, and with his own band the Deep Fix: ‘I was a hippy prince. I had an entourage … We did drugs and sex and blew our minds.’

He can remember when LSD was available over the counter at John Bell and Croydon in Wigmore Street, but his ‘true liking’, he confesses, is ‘for killer-narcotics, mainlined’.

He acknowledges, though, that they ‘can become a bit of a risk’, and in 1975 he

returned to a rather reactive and overdone sobriety … From being a glamorous bore I turned into a totally dull bore … I gave myself monkish rather than roguish airs.

He is very funny about his stint as a script writer in Hollywood, and interestingly prefers LA to San Francisco. (‘Only Geneva and Amsterdam are neater.’)

These days he lives with his American wife in Lost Pines, a liberal enclave of Texas, and deplores the way in which England

seems to be shedding her virtues as fast as she can, celebrating her vices … as class-bound as ever, and in some ways far more repressive than similar Oriental cultures.

Moorcock is elegant and aggressive (‘badly educated people are suspicious of ambiguity’), consistently entertaining, and frequently wise and generous. He is generally sound on religion and politics, despising Blair more than Thatcher, for example.

And however heartily one may join him in deploring science fiction, one can only applaud this, written in 1991, on ‘Cyberspace’ (an SF coinage): ‘It is, perhaps, the year 2011 … You float at ease in the centre of a vast library … Brilliantly coloured books radiate towards infinity.’ One applauds the louder when he adds:

Our scientific advances will be merely obscene unless they help the large part of our world’s population emerge from miserable uncertainty and debilitating terror.

John Davey, his editor, is surely right to hail Moorcock as the epitome of ‘the post-War culture ruffian’....