The Abortion was the first book by Richard Brautigan I read. A future employer recommended Brautigan to me before I travelled around the USA in 1998. I found The Abortion for $1.50 in a second-hand bookstore on the University of Washington campus in Seattle and this seemed to me quite an apt place to buy my first Brautigan book.
I wasn't too sure to what to expect from The Abortion, or any Brautigan book for that matter, but once I started reading the book I kind of understood where Brautigan was coming from. The wonderful idea of a library which houses unpublished books by anyone who takes the time to write them, like how to grow flowers by candle light, is something to which I'd hope all societies would aspire.
The scene painted by Brautigan throughout the book is one to which early Joni Mitchell records could be used as a soundtrack. Brautigan's writing style is simplistic but don't let that fool you. His use of language is unusual but that only goes to reinforce the sixties beatnik resolve at the centre of this novel.
While I read this I travelled through San Francisco to San Diego and down into Tijuana. The book acted like an unofficial guidebook and this is probably the best way to read Brautigan, against the backdrop of America itself. I managed to read other Brautigan books on this journey and subsequent trips to America but none have touched me as much as The Abortion. I would suggest anyone to book a ticket to the West Coast, buy The Abortion in a campus bookstore and read it under a leafy tree.