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Barry Miles

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Barry Miles


Born
in Cirencester, Gloucestershire, England, The United Kingdom
February 21, 1943

Website


Barry Miles is an English author best known for his deep involvement in the 1960s counterculture and for chronicling the era through his prolific writing. He played a key role in shaping and documenting the London underground scene, becoming a central figure among the poets, musicians, and artists who defined the decade’s rebellious spirit. A close associate of figures such as Allen Ginsberg and Paul McCartney, Miles not only witnessed the cultural revolution firsthand but also actively participated in it through ventures like the Indica Gallery and the alternative newspaper International Times.
In the early 1960s, Miles began working at Better Books in London, a progressive bookshop that became a hub for the avant-garde. While there, he w
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Barry Miles isn't a Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.

April 2025

Well, as we can see, the American experiment didn’t work. As Oscar Wilde memorably said, ‘America is the only country that went from barbarism to decadence without civilisation in between.� Most of its citizens can barely find their own country on a map and the country itself is run by a bunch of imbeciles. It is clearly time for Europe to take back the territory and start again. First to return a

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Published on April 09, 2025 12:08
Average rating: 3.55 · 101,575 ratings · 5,364 reviews · 67 distinct works â€� Similar authors
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Quotes by Barry Miles  (?)
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“The waste of self and money amused his followers.”
Barry Miles, London Calling: A Countercultural History of London since 1945

“Burroughs and Gysin had now extended cut-ups beyond tapes and collage and into the realm of personal relations. Burroughs now suspected that the entire fabric of reality was illusory and that someone, or something, was running the universe like a soundstage, with banks of tape recorders and film projectors. He was determined to find where the control words and images were coined. He was using cut-ups in an attempt to backtrack the word lines to find out where and when the conditioning had taken place, and more importantly, who was responsible. Suspicion fell on Time magazine’s enormous newspaper clipping morgue and the files of the FBI and the CIA. But they were more likely to be the source material for control, not the masters of it. However, with the aid of a great deal of majoun, Bill had finally determined that everybody was in fact an agent for a giant trust of insects from another galaxy, though, as usual with Burroughs, it is hard to tell how literally he meant this. However, he was certainly convinced that everyone was an agent for control and that the only way to find out who they really were was to cut them up.”
Barry Miles, Call Me Burroughs: A Life

“Bill and Dave paid sixty cents to watch two Arab boys screw each other. The boys protested, saying, “Malo,â€� it’s bad, it’s bad to do this, then they began giggling. David said, “Si, malo, todos malos,’â€� all bad. Bill reported the incident at length to Allen Ginsberg:

“We demanded semen too, no half-assed screwing. So I asked Marv: “Do you think they will do it?� and he says: ‘I think so. They are hungry.� They did it. Made me feel sorta like a dirty old man.� Bill used his report almost verbatim in the “Black Meat� section of The Naked Lunch.

“We took the two boys back to Dave’s room and told them what we wanted. After some coy giggling they agreed, and took off their ragged clothes. Both of them had slender, beautiful boy bodies. Dave was M.C. he pointed to Boy 2 and said: ‘All right, you screw him first� pointing to Boy 1. Boy 1 lay down on his stomach on the bed. Boy 2 rubbed spit on his prick and began screwing him. Dave said: ‘Leche we want leche.� Leche means milk, Spanish for jissum—the boy contracted convulsively and his breath whistled through his teeth. He lay still for a moment on top of the other boy then shoved himself off with both hands. He showed us the jissum on his prick and asked for a towel. Dave threw him one and he carefully wiped his prick. Then he lay down on his stomach and Boy 1 took over. He was more passionate. He got mad because Boy 2 kept his ass contracted and pounded on his buttocks with his fist. Finally he got it in and began screwing violently. Boy 2 groaned in protest. Boy 1 came almost immediately, his buttocks quivering in spasms. He sighed then rolled free...

I see both boys every day. They will do it anytime for forty cents, which is standard price.”
Barry Miles, Call Me Burroughs: A Life

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