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Manifesto : Anonymous : dedrabbit

manifesto.JPGManifesto
Author: Anonymous
Publisher: dedrabbit International Artist Collectives

If you’ve ever dreamed of dropping out of society, becoming a faceless vagrant living a life void of responsibility and indulging in a wanton overindulgence of alcohol, cigarettes and drugs whilst keeping a psychotic journal rivaled only by Hunter S. Thompson, perhaps you wrote Manifesto.

The wandering first person account put to paper is an anonymous novel, now in its third edition paperback form, published by dedrabbit International Artist Collectives – an underground network of people committed to “art, individual freedom and social activism.”

Over the course of 200 pages, the young author drops out of college, hitchhikes across the U.S. and then overseas, smokes what can only be 1,100 cigarettes and sporadically returns home to the security (and boredom) of well-off parents with open arms and wallets.

A story of freedom weighed down by an open mind belabored by a critical worldview, Manifesto tells the tale you always wanted to live if you just had the initiative.

Find a full list of distributors at DedRabbit.com, including Aardvark Records in Minneapolis.

Read the first page of the novel after the jump…

MANIFESTO – PAGE 1
I hated school. I hated work. I hated boredom. I had no interests. I had a happy childhood. There was school, adolescence, growing up, questions about the future. I was twenty-one. I had no dream.

I dropped in and out of college. After three years I wasn’t going back.
Students sat on lawns, drank coffee, held books, discussed ideas, wore expensive sandals and footwear. Professors taught classes on campus greens. Students basked in youth, in the fine times of college. I was told I’d meet my friends for life in college.
Everywhere people smoked, sat on wide steps of academic buildings, enjoyed the outdoors together, like people in glossy-paged catalogues.
I hated college atmosphere.

I left college for the last time as impulsively as ever—free and happy—like I had a bottomless pocket of money, fully funded, like my lungs were fresh and I could still run a mile in under six minutes.
Cars passed slow with the wind brushing up my hair. I listened to the dusty dirt on the bottoms of my new leather shoes. I felt slow like a fish underwater, like a soft cloud pulled along.
I was content to be slow, away from the vague traps between cause and effect.
Birds made noise along the roadsides, up high in the light-green pine needles. I smelled the sandy heat. When I closed my eyes I believed I had a grand future; I had no problems; the past didn’t matter.
I was going to make my life an adventure.

I hated being told I needed health insurance. I was sick of car insurance; tired of people that told me to go back to school, earn the degree, make something of my life.
People went to college and got what they paid for. I hated the relationship, the equation, the vending machine dispensing crinkly-packaged candies and chips.
I didn’t want a high-paying job. I hated jobs. I didn’t want an obvious life.

  • I’m lucky enough to live in the only town in New Zealand which has that book for sale in only one store.

    Above the fact I thoroughly enjoyed the poetic licence, the author does cover some relevant themes seen in today’s youth – e.g. no serious setbacks, but still no grand “ambition”, no interest in ambition.

    I've read the book is now in its third publication. It’s not so much the mystery of the identity of dedrabbit which has pushed the popularity of the book as the power of its content. I enjoyed it more than some of the “top 100″ classics I’ve read. I recommend it.

    Would you be so bold to say it has potential to become a classic? Why not? It’s relevant, offbeat and viral.
  • Manifesto
    grab a pen and make your own cover
  • Just received The Dedrabbit Manifesto in a pile of submissions. No cover letter, no artwork, just anonymous words. Something appealing about it, but I can't say what.
  • xthomasx
    Just bought it earlier in Melbourne, Australia. One of the greatest things i've ever read. Honest, passionate. Other people won't agree with the value I picked up from Manifesto but everyone will find different meaning in this book.
  • Name
    i picked this up in philly because of its blank cover and read the first couple lines on the train home. it was like reading my life then the life i've felt like living. it's absolutely beautiful and i want everyone i know to read it.
  • This book left me speechless in two ways. The first is that I didn't know if it was serious, exaggerated, or a mockery on rebellious literature. The second was the intensity of the story & all the confusion he feels. I am interested in rebellious/emotional/drug culture literature & this was by far one of the most intense & descriptive & beautiful book of such. I was given the book by my sister’s boyfriend who told me the protagonist (or the antagonist) reminded him of me. I started the book a month ago & found it a bore. I picked it up today to give it another shot & finished it in 10 hours. I ignored all my assignments at school & barely put the book down.

    One initial thing that irked me was the red letter attached to the book. It seemed to be stereotyping itself, saying all it’s influences & who to give it to. It was in a way stating that it was only for the rebels & artists & outcasts, which I have to disagree. I have explained the plot the best of my ability to peers throughout the day who are not “artists” or “rebels” & whatnot & they were asking me if they could borrow it afterwards.

    Overall, great book. Sad as fuck, but really made you think about yourself & your ideals & goals & what you want to do, if you really want to hit the road. I’m still I the haze of shock a few hours after reading. How every book should be. Raw, truthful, insightful, & possible to relate to. You’re amazing, whoever yuop may be…
  • Des
    This book was absolutely gorgeous.
    He said every word I've ever thought about what I wanted from life, but could not say myself.
    Whoever wrote this needs to know they're inspiring -- next year I'm packing a few of my things and I am out of here. I'm going to make something of myself, from nothing. I'm going to see the world now. Travel.
    Eat if I have money in my pocket, not eat if I don't.
    I do not want ties to anything right now.
    I'm going to roam.
  • It's something where the brilliance is found in the bits and pieces as opposed to the whole. It's no Hunter S. Thompson, it's no Jack Kerouac, but it's probably something they would have tolerated. I liked it. This is a kid who was some special anarchotic punk who went so far to prove himself, only to realize he was just as average as all the other special anarchotic punks. He's naive, and adorably so, but trying to prove he's wise beyond his years. I'm sure he reads it kicking his shins now.
  • Alex
    I got this book from most likely the same record store in New Zealand the other day - and indeed, the first page is promising - hell, who hasn't ever felt like that? - but every page goes speedily downhill from there. The protagonist's just some brat who hates fat people and puts girls on silly pedestals. Might as well be a jock. Makes me wish the many Hunter S-worshipping dudes I met at uni on their quest for authenticity had written their 'road novels', and I never thought I'd say that.
  • Lyall
    I bought this book from my record store in New Zealand the other day.

    Half way through so far... elements of Catcher in the Rye, On the Road, Charles Bukowski and William S. Burroughs, all in a contemporary setting. I'm really enjoying it. I wish I could say I've finished it to offer a full judgement, but so far, well worthy of becoming a classic. I don't remember who said it - but a classic doesn't necessarily tell you knew ideas, but tells you the ideas you already had. Definitely the case with "Manifesto"
  • zerooneseven
    I picked this blank cover book and read the first page above and thought, wow this is spot on what I think! Then it's like someone else wrote the rest. It goes from condemning the college life style, to "Hey I drank myself silly and smoked cigarettes!" On the very next page.... Way to be a hypocrite.
  • el jefe
    I have been accused of writing this, and well I wish I had.

    r eading this was like listening to my life story told by someone else...

    scary.

    good book though.
  • noelle
    I knew I wasn't the only outsider, slacker, wanna- be somebody but don't know how, self-conscious yet secure in the fact that every one else really is like me, but different in their own ways...I really enjoy reading this manifesto--having the comfort in knowing we're connected by human emotions but deviate from our similarities in unique ways...like trying to match numbers in the mega millions lottery...it's very unlikely we match in identity, yet we are all made of shuffled combinations of the same numbers.
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