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Some of the harshest stories Stone knows are about his own life. A native of New York City, he was abandoned at birth by his father and ended up in an orphanage after his mother was institutionalized. Desperate to break away, he dropped out of high school and joined the Navy at 17. By his mid-20s, he was living in New Orleans and selling Collier's Encyclopedias. "I was selling them in Pearl River County, Miss., and other areas not far from New Orleans," he says. "And every time we hit a town with our encyclopedias, we always got busted by the cops, because they always thought we were in town agitating. We were locked up about seven times. We had to get the Collier's lawyers to come spring us. And sometimes we didn't know if they were going to beat us to death, or if they were going to buy us coffee." Stone became one of those wandering souls who lived out a 1960s lifestyle before anyone knew it was a
'60s lifestyle. After New Orleans, he moved to the Bay Area and met Ken Kesey, Neal Cassady and "all those crazies" of the counterculture. It was a prime moment to "discover America," and Stone would begin sharing what he had seen and done with the 1966 novel, "Hall of Mirrors," a surreal tale of corruption, decadence and breakdown set in New Orleans. "We were just going through this extraordinary experience," he says. "I really found myself deep in the heart of America, however deep in the heart of America was possible. I had a lot to write about." "Everybody gets the America they deserve," he adds with a laugh. "But that's not true. Fortunately, it's not true."
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