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How I Accidentally Started the Sixties

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"Every page, every paragraph, every sentence sparkles with captivating metaphors, delightful verbal concoctions, alchemical insights, philosophic whimsy, absurd illogicals, scientific comedy routines, relentless, non-stop waves of hilarity. The comparisons to James Joyce are undeniable. Wow! Whew! Wild! Wonderful!”" Timothy Leary

The strangest memoir you will ever read.

You or your parents lived it. I helped start it. And it was an accident. It was the era of myth, legend, sex, and extreme adventure called The Sixties.

“I blasted through Howard Bloom’s How I Accidentally Started The Sixties like the wildfire swallowing up my mountain in California. I loved it. The molecular amusement ride, the sexual Disneyland, the Chevy 350 Impala blasting down the freeway at 120 mph. The universal essence is its brilliant simplicity.....Reality is really a mind field seen through Bloom’s neurotic Buddha-like mind resplendent with every major family issue mortal humans will ever come across in a life identity, parents, meaning, self, non-self, food, habitation, education, goals, marriage, family, children, God, sex, more sex————DRUGS. It slithers like a rattlesnake across the page, the way a story should. What I love most is the off the wall comedy. Howard Bloom as Harpo Marx riding a freight train like Buddha carrying his life in a sleeping bag. I mean it’s priceless. Bloom’s psychedelic journey across the American landscape, is deciphered through the irresistible minds of murderers, crackpots, Nobel Prize Playboy bunnies, scholars, waiters, hobo gurus, cops, professors, French majors, psychiatrists, cock suckers, recreational drug users, Mormons, Jews, nut jobs, laundry mat owners, demonic children, lizards...........Aldous Huxley with a pinch of Timothy Leary.............and every molecule in the universe. It separates Bloom from any scientist/global mind who ever lived. Richard Feynman, Albert Einstein, and Aldous Huxley would be proud. Each man strived to marry science, art, and poetry but never managed to pull it off. How I Accidentally Started the Sixties does. I salute Howard Bloom. His doctrine sparkles every page with his Promethean fire; distilled in Shakespeare’s immortal words, ‘From women’s eyes this doctrine I derive’.....[women] are the books, the arts, the academies, that show, contain and nourish the world.’ Love’s Labour Lost, only in Bloom’s case, found, lost, and then found again. God only knows what else this mastermind is hiding from the rest of us.” Mark Lamonica, winner of the Southern California Booksellers Association Nonfiction Award, author of Junk Yard Dogs And William Shakespeare and Renaissance Porn The Saga of Pietro Aretino, The World's Greatest Hustler

220 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 19, 2013

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About the author

Howard Bloom

24 books305 followers
"I know a lot of people. A lot. And I ask a lot of prying questions. But I've never run into a more intriguing biography than Howard Bloom's in all my born days. " Paul Solman, Business and Economics Correspondent, PBS NewsHour


Howard Bloom has been called “next in a lineage of seminal thinkers that includes Newton, Darwin, Einstein,[and] Freud,” by Britain's Channel4 TV, "the next Stephen Hawking" by Gear Magazine, and "The Buckminster Fuller and Arthur C. Clarke of the new millennium" by Buckminster Fuller's archivist. Bloom is the author of The Lucifer Principle: A Scientific Expedition Into the Forces of History ("mesmerizing"—The Washington Post), Global Brain: The Evolution of Mass Mind from the Big Bang to the 21st Century ("reassuring and sobering"—The New Yorker), The Genius of the Beast: A Radical Re-Vision of Capitalism ("Impressive, stimulating, and tremendously enjoyable." James Fallows, National Correspondent, The Atlantic), and The God Problem: How A Godless Cosmos Creates ("Bloom's argument will rock your world." Barbara Ehrenreich). Bloom has been published in arxiv.org, the leading pre-print site in advanced theoretical physics and math. He was invited to tell an international conference of quantum physicists in Moscow in 2005 why everything they know about quantum physics is wrong. And his book Global Brain was the subject of an Office of the Secretary of Defense symposium in 2010, with participants from the State Department, the Energy Department, DARPA, IBM, and MIT. Bloom has founded three international scientific groups: the Group Selection Squad (1995), which fought to gain acceptance for the concept of group selection in evolutionary biology; The International Paleopsychology Project (1997), which worked to create a new multi-disciplinary synthesis between cosmology, paleontology, evolutionary biology, and history; and The Space Development Steering Committee (2007), an organization that includes astronauts Buzz Aldrin, Edgar Mitchell and members from NASA, the National Science Foundation, and the Department of Defense.

Bloom explains that his focus is “mass behavior, from the mass behavior of quarks to the mass behavior of human beings.” In 1968 Bloom turned down four fellowships in psychology and neurobiology and set off on a science project in a field he knew nothing about: popular culture. He was determined to tunnel into the forces of history by entering “the belly of the beast where new myths, new mass passions, and new mass movements are made.” Bloom used simple correlational techniques plus what he calls “tuned empathy” and “saturated intuition” to help build or sustain the careers of figures like Prince, Michael Jackson, Bob Marley, Bette Midler, Billy Joel, Paul Simon, Billy Idol, Peter Gabriel, David Byrne, John Mellencamp, Queen, Kiss, Aerosmith, AC/DC, Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five, Run DMC, and roughly 100 others. In the process, he generated $28 billion in revenues (more than the gross domestic product of Oman or Luxembourg) for companies like Sony, Disney, Pepsi Cola, Coca Cola, and Warner Brothers. Bloom also helped launch Farm Aid and Amnesty International’s American presence. He worked with the United Negro College Fund,the National Black United Fund, and the NAACP, and he put together the first public service radio campaign for solar power (1981). Today, his focus on group behavior extends to geopolitics. He has debated one-one-one with senior officials from Egypt’s Moslem Brotherhood and Gaza’s Hamas on Iran’s Arab-language international Alalam TV News Network. He has dissected headline issues on Saudi Arabia’s KSA1-TV and on Iran’s global English language Press-TV. And he has appeared fifty two times for up to five hours on 500 radio stations in North America.

Bloom is a former visiting scholar in the Graduate School of Psychology at NYU and a former core faculty member at the Graduate Institute in Meriden, Connecticut. He has written for Th

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5 stars
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18 (39%)
3 stars
12 (26%)
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3 (6%)
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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Fran Sullivan.
24 reviews1 follower
April 30, 2020
The book unfolds on the same course as the author’s life.
The depth, dimension, the level of life engagement and impact brew and blossom, if you allow.
The experience of reading along replicates unfolding of the author in life as it was for him, and in reading this through, feeling certainly worthwhile for you.
Not pompous. Not overstated. A full circle of evolving surprise.
6 reviews
August 5, 2018
Very interesting read for those of us who remember the 50s 60s...
Profile Image for dr_set.
272 reviews1 follower
June 19, 2018
A beautiful and very entertaining biography of a very strange and varied life that also contains a lot of insight on the human plight.
The quintessential outsider, Bloom was bullied and excluded during his childhood and teenage years, but far from putting him down, this constant rejection sent him on a life long quest for experiences, knowledge and understanding that spanned the most varied walks of life, from the hippy culture to academia and the music industry. A truly remarkable journey that he shares with his readers in a very light and fluent prose full of marvelous insight.
Profile Image for Anthony O'Connor.
Author 5 books31 followers
April 6, 2023
I don't know why I find the author's works so interesting. He is loud, repetitious, more than a little prone to exaggeration putting it mildly, and relentlessly self aggrandizing. His science works are interesting enough though they fall far short of the grand synthesis they are purported to be. He is hardly the next Newton/Darwin/Einstein etc that he claims. There are a few interesting themes. But it's easy enough to come up with grand overviews and everyone thinks that their particular insights are so special. Who knows maybe some of them are. But the real work is in the nuts and the bolts - the hard details, proof and evidence - not the fuzzy generalities of pompous attention craving populists.
In this work we are treated to an autobiography. We can take the title suitably tongue in cheek as intended ... I think !? And it is quite fascinating. A wild man in wild times. Who manages to mention just about everything topical at the time. So a good memory jog if nothing else. But more than that a solid account of a striving and confused young man in strident and confusing times looking for his niche ... and lots of sexual encounters along the way. He finds his niche eventually, fame and fortune as a publicist and PR guy. Of course.
I'll try some of the political/economic overviews next. Where once again I'll be treated to the outbursts of Howard the genius who knows everything about everything. But he does know a lot and though often annoying he is never boring.
19 reviews
February 3, 2018
A good read

Not much substance. I too am a child of the 60s and had more excitement in one summer than Mr. Bloom seems to have had in 25 years.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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