It's a long book, though if you can do it it's about opening up a rave club and experiencing early rave culture through the mind of the writer. I read it at 17, but it had me engaged which was hard to do then - my girlfriend passed it to me someone gave it to her - it was like an underground Bible for people who hadn't read transpotting yet. I got pretty far in - when it was time to pass it on. What I thought was: I would read it to see another kind of world that is very "behind the scenes" of the world that they talk about in the book. It feels like you are in the background, which is strange to say but it is in a way an experimental book I think for kids in their 20s "or adults in their 50s, 60s". Why? I see both as needing to read that book and to know those things. It's an easy read though I didn't know then, but the author is quite an esoteric writer and will use that in his writing which makes it more interesting. It's a book for them that weren't there at the core of that specific and ultra bohemian culture that stayed underground and always will. Rave on! See ya! Chicago, Illinois.