In 1963 the paperback revolution was making good literature widely
available for the first time, yet only a handful of stores took the
trend seriously enough to devote themselves to the cause. Rambam, a
closet-sized shop on a corner of Berkeley's Telegraph Avenue was one.
The
owners had a falling out, as partners often do, but the results were
glorious instead of tragic, with ripples that birthed much of the
culture we take for granted now. Underground comics, New Age publishing,
used record stores, and poster art all came from Rambam's big bang, as
each new business with visionary (but ornery) partners formed and then
split again.
The Loneliness of the Electric Menorah is the
social history of one of America's most legendary streets, and a family
tree of the movements it fostered: the paperback revolution, the graphic
novel, Slow Food, New Age, the Free Speech Movement?and even the
Symbionese Liberation Army.