Richard Brautigan

Wikipedia

Richard Brautigan was an American writer and poet 20th century, cult author of Trout Fishing in America and In Watermelon Sugar. Blending absurdism, humour, and melancholy, he became a voice of the 1960s counterculture. His work explored loneliness, love, and the absurdity of existence, inspiring generations of readers and writers alike.

✨ Trout Fishing in America became a counterculture classic, though Brautigan denied being its “prophet.” 📖 The book is a collage of vignettes, prose poems, and absurd humour rather than a conventional novel. 🌉 He lived in San Francisco, deeply tied to the bohemian “Summer of Love.” 📚 Often read poetry accompanied by rock bands, creating performance-like events. 🍉 In Watermelon Sugar is seen as his most poetic and enigmatic work. 💡 Loved genre-blending: mixing novel, essay, poetry, and surreal fragments. 📖 Achieved cult fame in Japan, hailed as a “Western Zen poet.” 🎣 Gave away fishing rods to friends, inscribed “for trout fishing in America.” 😅 Funny fact: inscribed books “with love, Richard” even to strangers. 🤔 Curious note: sold more books in France than in the US, joking “they understand me better there.”