At eighteen, Paul Mountain pissed on his academic scholarship to the University of Minnesota and fled to Boulder, Colorado without money, family or prospects. In a cramped one-bedroom apartment with two other dudes, Paul's life was youth unbridled, impulsive, and without remorse.
Within a year, Paul finds himself in a tiny cabin with his girlfriend in a Rocky Mountain ghost town, convinced he can write his way out of poverty before buying his first legal drink. He was wrong. He was wrong about many things.
In his whirlwind memoir, Paul escorts the reader on his rabid quest for anything to avoid the looming bondage of adult responsibility set against the backdrop of the final decade before the internet. Pepperoni, Jalapeños & LSD is a story filled with old motorcycles, speed junkies, crime, sex, mountaintops, poverty, more sex, empty ski slopes and laugh out loud happiness. It's a story of embracing life, because as Paul notes, "The day will soon come when the cigarettes finally take hold, the doctor shouts, 'Cancer!', and God's gavel falls, sentencing me to death and who the fuck knows what else. Probably hell, but I'm hoping for a clerical error, the great celestial typo."
At eighteen, Paul Mountain pissed on his academic scholarship to the University of Minnesota and fled to Boulder, Colorado without money, family or prospects. In a cramped one-bedroom apartment with two other dudes, Paul's life was youth unbridled, impulsive, and without remorse.
Within a year, Paul finds himself in a tiny cabin with his girlfriend in a Rocky Mountain ghost town, convinced he can write his way out of poverty before buying his first legal drink. He was wrong. He was wrong about many things.
In his whirlwind memoir, Paul escorts the reader on his rabid quest for anything to avoid the looming bondage of adult responsibility set against the backdrop of the final decade before the internet. Pepperoni, Jalapeños & LSD is a story filled with old motorcycles, speed junkies, crime, sex, mountaintops, poverty, more sex, empty ski slopes and laugh out loud happiness. It's a story of embracing life, because as Paul notes, "The day will soon come when the cigarettes finally take hold, the doctor shouts, 'Cancer!', and God's gavel falls, sentencing me to death and who the fuck knows what else. Probably hell, but I'm hoping for a clerical error, the great celestial typo."
I think I’m gonna barf.
I’ve never puked from a hangover before, but a full-on vomithon in the New Orleans airport on Halloween morning would be a respectable first. Had I actually eaten anything in the last twenty-four hours, I might be hanging over the toilet right now, but a bender of this magnitude neither required nor tolerated food near the end. The final day was alcohol-only, an exclusive stomach club. NO SOLIDS ALLOWED.
I can hardly sit up in this cheap, plastic chair, can barely focus on my computer screen. My fingers are vibrating above the keys, but since my eyeballs are shaking in their sockets, it evens out somehow. I’m oozing hangover, a thick goo that coats my skin and crawls down my back in little globs like slimy insects creeping toward the dark comfort of my crack. This is what three days of insane liver lubrication does to a man.
I know I’m not the first person to endure a monster hangover on the hard chairs of the New Orleans airport. The trashcans and toilets of this building have undoubtedly swallowed countless loads of self-indulgent barf, the wandering wasted of America hurling up their excess before staggering onto planes. I’m sure my weekend partners in crime, my boyhood friends Adam and Larry, sat here only hours before, dealing with their own colossal suffering. I bet three quarters of the people in this place on this gray Halloween morning are asking themselves the same damn question I’m asking myself: Why the hell do I pound the sauce until I’m one small step away from the emergency room?
An airport is a godawful place to suffer a hangover this brutal, but it’s still a thousand times better than the hotel room I recently fled. I woke up alone in that disaster, Adam and Larry already off on early flights to different regions of the country. Opening my eyes, I felt as if I’d exited the predictable world of temporary hotel accommodation and entered the lair of a violent animal. I gazed around at five-hundred square feet of suite that looked like Mötley Crüe gang-fucked it while I slept, then turned it over to The Who for sloppy seconds. An alcoholic’s smorgasbord littered the room: beer bottles, half-eaten chicken wings, frisbeed pepperonis, overflowing ashtrays, empty airplane bottles of whiskey, chew-spit cups, flicked sausages, lonely glasses of forgotten vodka, tipped over lamps, pizza crusts, couch cushions where couch cushions do not belong, smashed potato chips where smashed potato chips definitely belong, and cheap red wine bottles dripping merlot blood onto abused carpet. I admonished myself to man up and clean up, then threw exactly two beer bottles into one trashcan before quitting. Fuck it. It was no time to be a hero. A wise man knows when to accept defeat and spread his butt cheeks just wide enough for his tail to fit comfortably between his legs. Then he slinks away, dragging behind him all his guilt and shame.
Since straightening up was out of the question, I staggered through the room and stuffed my suitcase full of everything I could remember bringing. Setting my bag by the door, I wished I had even one measly dollar to tip the poor maids. Christ, what a sorry excuse for a man. I sighed, then scribbled a quick apology note, leaving it in the most visible location amidst the destruction.
TRULY sorry for the mess!!!
Capital letters, an underlined word, and a few exclamation points had to count for something, right? It wasn’t a tip, sure, but at least it showed I knew I was an asshole for stiffing them. Picking up my suitcase, I fled to the airport, far away from that hotel horror show.
The maids are probably wiping their ass with my apology note right now, and I don’t blame them, but really, it’s not completely my fault. There’s a stripper somewhere out there who shares some culpability, dammit. She’s the real cause of my temporary poverty, whoever she is, wherever she is. Sticky fingers lurk in every dark corner of Bourbon Street, but they are at their stickiest in the dark corners of strip clubs. Granted, it was a mistake to parade my blackout in front of stripper greed – bringing a blackout to a strip club is like bringing steaks to the zoo – but did she really have to steal everything? Apparently so. Practice poles don’t come cheap. That New Orleans pole-twirler now owns my credit cards, debit cards, and all my cash, which was substantial. I’m left with what little money Adam could loan me after we blew through his daily debit card limit. I hope it’s enough to get my car out of the airport parking lot back in Denver, but it’ll be close.
Jesus, I gotta stop doing this dumb shit. I need a long, long break from the sauce. This kind of debauchery is something I would expect from a 21-year-old frat boy, not a 41-year-old software developer. For chrissake, I own an international software company, have thousands of people around the world counting on my competence. What if one of my servers went down? I’d be fucked. I can’t think my way through a shoelace knot right now, much less a server meltdown. That’s exactly why I shouldn’t be acting like some college kid, pounding Fireball shots at strip clubs until 5:00 a.m. Who do I think I am, Jim Morrison? Even ol’ Jimbo gave up the ghost at twenty-seven, bloated in a bathtub. I’ve made it to forty-one, but if I keep going like this, I might meet Morrison faster than I can say “Lizard King.”
Worst of all, Stella is going to strangle me when I walk through the door. I know this, because when I talked to her last night, she specifically stated, “I'm going to strangle you when you walk through the door.” As an attorney, Stella could do it…and get away with it. When she passed the Colorado bar exam, they gave her one free murder, no questions asked.
What I really need right now is something soothing, maybe a song, a little tune to help me forget who I was this weekend, something that promises things can only get better. Where are you, Little Orphan Annie? Sing me your soft and melodic version of “Tomorrow,” you freckled little freak. Tell me how the sun will come out tomorrow, how I can bet my bottom dollar – had I not stuffed it in a stripper’s panties – that tomorrow, everything will be better. Everything will be roses just as soon as I get home to my Colorado mountains, stretch my body out on my beautiful couch, endure Stella’s simmering anger, then sleep, sleep, sleep.
Still, all this whining sounds suspiciously like The Sunday Speech. The Sunday Speech varies slightly from drunk to drunk, region to region, but for the most part, it happens on the Sunday of every lost weekend, and it goes a little something like this:
THE SUNDAY SPEECH
by Every Drunk
A. I will stop drinking so much.
B. I will stop smoking so much.
C. I will stop throwing twenties at strippers.
D. I will begin a new workout routine, starting tomorrow.
E. I will eat healthier, starting tomorrow.
F. I will be more receptive to my wife’s justifiable concerns.
G. I will call my mother, maybe next Wednesday.
And this time, I mean it.
A laugh out loud coming of age tale told by the hero himself. Looking back on his own turbulent youth, author Paul Mountain recollects his 18th year, in which he and two buddies take off from their childhood home of frigid Minnesota to begin the newest chapter of their lives in sun and skin drenched Colorado. Mountain’s memoir is a frankly honest retelling of some of his formative life experiences, related in a way that is both strangely familiar and recklessly hysterical.
As with any classic example of fine literature, the book’s opening line clearly sets the overall tone; “ I think I’m gonna barf.” The author’s wry writ is so evident throughout, that even the copyrights page is infused with Mountain’s frank style of humor. But while the author is clearly great at parties, there are ample signs of his also being highly philosophical. Take this rather brooding excerpt; “Once a man has satisfied all his essential needs, he must either expand his definition of need or become obsessed with the meaning of life, haunted by the probability that there is none.” Woah there, Pablo, that’s heavy. But don’t let the profound musings deter you from the novel’s otherwise clever punchiness. Profundity and wit both abide in this man’s biography. If any fault can be found, one could point out the lack of an overall climatic resolution. Although nearly all the events recounted feel resolved in the end, one childhood story does leave us wondering: Did Dad ever notice the missing candy?
Mountain’s frankly honest writing style is unapologetically candid. He brings his past alive in all its sordid, youthful arrogance; and with it, that of his readers. When describing a fight with a girlfriend, Mountain easily makes jealously look both absurdly comical and scarily familiar as the self-buoying, innate trait within all of us of jumping to the worst of conclusions. His portrayal of the young’s unflinchingly egocentric perception of the world is always spot on. While pondering imminent drug use, Paul writes, “There were so many things in the world I shouldn’t do, but all too often, those were the exact things I wanted to do.”
Reading Mountain’s personal accounts about run-ins with the law, marathon sexual escapades, and other terrible decisions made under the influence of LSD or copious amounts of alcohol seems to stir up a certain nostalgia for that time long ago when life seemed wide open. A hilarious and thoughtful work for anyone who can look back and recall how the world of an eighteen-year-old felt jaw-dropping and unstoppable.