In his new book Literary Rogues: A Scandalous History of Wayward Authors, Andrew Shaffer writes that as an impressionable 15-year old, he discovered the novel Less Than Zero – with all its “sex, drugs, and bad attitude.”
To the teenager, Bret Easton Ellis was, in a word, cool.
Years later, Shaffer wondered: Whatever happened to the literary bad boys and girls of yesteryear? Why are writers today so tame in comparison?
These questions were the impetus behind this well-researched book. He combed literary history for writers as famous for their misbehavior as for their talent and collated their drugs of choice: laudanum (opium), absinthe, alcohol, Benzedrine, morphine, heroin, LSD, mescaline, cocaine and always sex.
Scoundrels include Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834), whose fragmented poem “Kubla Khan” has long been attributed to…