Mango Lassie: A Memoir of the Sixties

Mango Lassie: A Memoir of the Sixties

Mango Lassie: A Memoir of the Sixties

Mango Lassie: A Memoir of the Sixties

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Overview

They say, "If you can remember the Sixties, you probably weren't there."

Happily, Dougie MacKenzie recalls those zonked and zany times and brings them hilariously back to life in his regaling memoir, Mango Lassie.

MacKenzie reveals himself as a pre-adolescent trapped in the "rat" system of a Southern military school.

From an abyss of despair following the death of his brother, the disaffected teen finds solace in the arms of two girls he meets in France and pursues later as a freshman at Georgetown.

Avidly a lad with the ladies–and cutting an amorous swathe that Valentino would've envied, MacKenzie woos his women from the steamy streets of Pigalle to the waxed dance floors of Washington's Embassy Row.

At Georgetown University, at the height of the Vietnam War, MacKenzie meets his match in the uproarious Peter Fletcher.

In the thrall of his man-about-town mentor, MacKenzie is spirited through the doors of perception, and, ultimately–with the aid of a churlish dean–booted through the doors of expulsion.

Mango Lassie rollicks with wit and the follies of impassioned youth. It is a chronicle of college life that belongs on every bookshelf beside Brideshead Revisited and Stover at Yale.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940016391984
Publisher: Dougie Mackenzie
Publication date: 02/03/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Dougie MacKenzie was born in Washington, D.C. He grew up in Middleburg,
Virginia and was educated at Georgetown University and the Sorbonne.
An award-winning playwright, MacKenzie was Pasatiempo Magazine's 1988
Santa Fe Signature Artist for Writing. His work includes: The Water Gators In Hell
(1977), a “beast” epic poem that takes its cues from Lord Byron's "A Vision Of
Judgment,” and two plays, "The Splendid Wren,” which opened at The Santa Fe
Playhouse in 1996, and the acclaimed "Baby Rugby,” which had its debut at The Armory
For The Arts Theatre in Santa Fe, in 1998. The play that year received plaudits from
theater critic Craig Smith in The New Mexican.
MacKenzie lives currently in Purcellville, Virginia. He began writing his
memoir, Mango Lassie while still a resident of Santa Fe.
"What I miss most about Santa Fe are the sunsets, the green chile and the good
vibes," he says. “Santa Fe is the elephant graveyard for Sixties freaks. Flower Power is
thriving in New Mexico. So is the art world. If you can't find inspiration in the Land Of
Enchantment, you’d better hang it up."
“I lived the writer's life also in Paris, Rome, and London, and they can't touch
Santa Fe. I owe my inspiration to twenty-three years of Santa Fe mornings."
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