Fugitives and Refugees: A Walk in Portland, Oregon (Crown Journeys)
Want to know where Chuck Palahniuk’s tonsils currently reside?
Been looking for a naked mannequin to hide in your kitchen cabinets?
Curious about Chuck’s debut in an MTV music video?
What goes on at the Scum Center?
How do you get to the Apocalypse Caf??
In the closest thing he may ever write to an autobiography, Chuck Palahniuk provides answers to all these questions and more as he takes you through the streets, sewers, and local haunts of Portland, Oregon. According to Katherine Dunn, author of the cult classic Geek Love, Portland is the home of America’s “fugitives and refugees.” Get to know these folks, the “most cracked of the crackpots,” as Palahniuk calls them, and come along with him on an adventure through the parts of Portland you might not otherwise believe actually exist. No other travel guide will give you this kind of access to “a little history, a little legend, and a lot of friendly, sincere, fascinating people who maybe should’ve kept their mouths shut.”
Here are strange personal museums, weird annual events, and ghost stories. Tour the tunnels under downtown Portland. Visit swingers’ sex clubs, gay and straight. See Frances Gabe’s famous 1940s Self-Cleaning House. Look into strange local customs like the I-Tit-a-Rod Race and the Santa Rampage. Learn how to talk like a local in a quick vocabulary lesson. Get to know, I mean really get to know, the animals at the Portland zoo.
Oh, the list goes on and on.
It's rare to find a travel guide and a memoir joined neatly together in a single, highly readable 176-page volume. But Chuck Palahniuk (Fight Club, Choke, Lullaby) is a writer of rare talent and his home of Portland, Oregon, is a city of rare wonders. In Strangers and Refugees: A Walk in Portland, Oregon, Palahniuk goes beyond the AAA handbooks to reveal the places, people, and legends of Portland that have long been known only to locals. The reader learns the location of the legendary Self Cleaning House, where to find the restless ghost of the founder of Powell's Books, and why feral cats are such an important part of Portland baseball. Portland, it seems, is also a highly sexual city and Palahniuk dutifully dissects the specialties of each strip joint as well as discussing Mochika, a zoo penguin with a real fetish for black boots. Along the way, he includes "postcards" from his life in the Rose City dating back to 1981 when, as a 19-year-old, he dropped acid and accidentally ate part of a woman's fur coat during a laser show of Pink Floyd's The Wall. As Palahniuk matures, the postcards reveal the author becoming increasingly a part of the city's scene, culminating with a wild and wooly Millennium Eve celebration at the Bagdad Theater that featured a screening of the film version of Fight Club. Fugitives and Refugees is a must for anyone who may, in their lives, go to Portland. But its appeal should reach beyond Oregonians. Palahniuk's love of the city is so great, and his stories so weirdly wonderful, it makes one want to get out of the house, get in the car, and drive to Portland right away. Just remember to pack the book. --John Moe
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36 Reviews
| From: Amazon Posted: Oct 28, 2008 Type: User Review |
A different type of travel guide
This book is something different from Palahniuk, a view from his point of view about his town of Portland, Oregon. It's very different in the fact that he includes phone numbers and addresses for many of the places of interest that he speaks...
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![]() 4.00/5 |
| From: Amazon Posted: Sep 05, 2008 Type: User Review |
Great Glimpse into a Great City
If you like Chuck Palahniuk and have been to Portland, you will love this book.
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![]() 5.00/5 |
| From: Amazon Posted: May 08, 2008 Type: User Review |
Drag Queens and Aborted Fetuses in Portland, OR
Okay, so it doesn't start off with a story about some kind of crazy sextravaganza out in middle America like his other nonfiction, "Stranger Than Fiction," but Chuck Palahniuk's "Fugitives and Refugees" still contains its share of interesting and...
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![]() 4.00/5 |
| From: Amazon Posted: Jun 26, 2007 Type: User Review |
An interesting look at Portland
I was given this book as a gift and did not know what to expect. Though it was not a novel like other Palahniuk books I have read, I found that the quirky and humorous writing style made this voyeuristic romp through underground Portland highly...
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![]() 4.00/5 |
| From: Amazon Posted: Apr 10, 2007 Type: User Review |
Oregonian loving this book
I live in Eugene, OR... and LOVE this book! We take "trips" to our fave town all the time and love the people and places...Chuck does a great job of describing them like a native Oregonian (even though he technically isn't).
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![]() 5.00/5 |
| From: Amazon Posted: Aug 24, 2006 Type: User Review |
Interesting, offbeat
This collection is an idiosyncratic and appealing mix of off-the-beaten-path sights for the visitor to Portland, personal anecdotes of the author, and brief essays about the history of Portland and its defining vibes. Entertaining and enjoyable.
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![]() 5.00/5 |
| From: Amazon Posted: May 28, 2006 Type: User Review |
a puking bore
As he writes in his epilogue, "This is not Portland, Oregon." Just scads of non-site-specific deegradation written in clipped New Yorker prose. Elliptical descriptions of perversion after perversion, spilling over the pages to become one big bore....
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![]() 1.00/5 |
| From: Amazon Posted: Feb 02, 2006 Type: User Review |
good
I couldn't put it down. It's an important book for people who live in and around portland.
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![]() 5.00/5 |
| From: Amazon Posted: May 18, 2005 Type: User Review |
Chuck Palahnuik's view on reality
Awesome, quirky, funny, poignant and very special view of Chuck Palahnuik's home town. It's an amazing read, that will have you feeling like you know so much more about where Chuck's whacky ideas and imagination come from.
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![]() 5.00/5 |
| From: Amazon Posted: Apr 28, 2005 Type: User Review |
Portland's Finest (Well, Not Exactly)
Portland, Oregon.
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![]() 4.00/5 |
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