I matriculated at the University of Hawaii, Manoa as a prospective triple-major (English, Political Science, and an interdisciplinary Planetary Science major), in the Honors Program, and proceeded to take on 18-21 credits per semester of the most challenging courses I could make my way into for the first two semesters, while going in every direction that looked interesting extracirricularly. I was appointed Editor-in-Chief of 
Hawaii Review, the only literary magazine on campus in those years before 
Manoa, as an 18-year-old frosh; that appointment was rescinded by the Board of Publications for essentially frivolous reasons and against their own rules, without my (or my successor) being able to get the funds from the BOP to produce any issues.  That, while enervating, was lost a bit in the rush of three friends and my campaign, as the Green Slate, for the student Senate of the Associated Students of UH...there were 19 senatorial slots in the College of Arts and Sciences, and 24 candidates. My friend Keiko was easily elected, and I came in 19th, so barely was; our running-mates Darius and Greg placed in the last five in vote totals. We were all motivated to one degree or another by opposition to the Maranatha Christian-cult incumbents on the Senate, who were able to ram through various questionable bills and resolutions in my freshman year; we foiled some of their further attempts, despite most of the executive offices in the new administration being held by Maranathans who had been senators the previous year (Keiko transferred to Barnard College at Columbia U over the summer, but Greg, whose brother was a newly elected Maranathan senator, and Darius were able to enter the senate as Keiko and others dropped out...one of the two School of Engineering senators, Kevin, was an ally on some of these matters, and was also, like Keiko, a punk-rock enthusiast rather more seriously than I was...as a favor, later, in part to thank him for letting me crash with his family, I bankrolled in part his concert event, the Second Pacific Nu Musik Festival, which was a watershed in Hawaiian punk and new wave events). I also became, more by default than anything else, the president of the Honolulu Science Fiction Society.
So it would be hard to blame my reading in those Hawaiian years for my extraordinarily mixed record as a student in 1982-1983, when after three semesters I dropped out of the UH, halfway through my incumbency, and having taken writing courses with Robert Onopa (a 300-level course as a second-semester freshman) and A. A. Attanasio (a graduate seminar in my sophomore year's first and only Hawaiian semester). But I was certainly still reading 
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction and the horror-fiction magazine and anthology series 
Whispers and 
Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine and while growing decreasingly happy with the tack 
The Atlantic was taking, this new incarnation of 
Harper's  was interesting.  As was, among the books I was quite happy to find, the now rather obscure collection of interviews with and profiles of sf and fantasy writers called 
Dream Makers II, the second such volume, assembled by the ever-contentious Charles Platt, who nonetheless with these books was channeling the rather more openhearted and professionally smooth approach of one of his idols, Alfred Bester, who loved writing sf but loved writing and editing (and particularly profiling) for 
Holiday magazine in its glory years in the 1960s about as much.  Platt's first volume did reasonably well, for a collection of interview-based essays, and Platt was able to get backing to touch base with a similar range of writers for the second volume, including such folks as the half-paralyzed and sporadically enraged Keith Laumer, grimly determined to get past the strokes that hadn't yet utterly incapacitated him; Joanna Russ explicitly Outing herself as lesbian, still a relatively bold move in 1983 even if not much of a suprise to those who'd been reading her more autobiographical work; Jerry Pournelle expressing his appreciation for Mussolini and the Fascists, and revealing that he had been, briefly, after his service in the US military in the Korean War, a member of the US Communist Party, largely out of disgust with what he'd just experienced (and, one gathered, his still-strong fetish for Order and Hierarchy), and generally reading how a second set of major writers in the field felt they should present themselves and their work, and what Platt made of them as interview subjects, usually in their homes when they were game to have him over.  Fascinating stuff, and certainly Platt's piece on Theodore Sturgeon in this volume didn't make it any easier to miss (what would turn out to be) Sturgeon's last writers' workshop, on one of the neighbor islands, which I couldn't afford to attend so didn't apply for (this was in a period of trying to make my way without taking more money from my parents, which turned out not to work so very well in the depressed job market of 1983-84 Honolulu/Oahu).

Well, having left Hawaii to rejoin my parents, brother and cat, who had moved in '83 to the DC suburbs in Virginia, I got some jerk jobs and began saving money to return to school there, going on to fill out some core requirements at Northern Virginia Community College in 1985, where in working on the campus paper I met Frank Lawrence, my Green/libertarian-left political interests didn't lessen, and in reading a column in 
Utne Reader about a Canadian journal that sounded particularly interesting, I sent off for a copy of 
Our Generation, the libertarian socialist and anarchist magazine, which in that issue featured long essays by Noam Chomsky and Murray Bookchin, and shorter pieces (iirc) by George Woodcock and Janet Biehl, among others.  
Our Generation would soon be supplemented by such more local productions as 
Social Anarchism, which I would eventually contribute to editorially, and such more farflung publications as 
The Match!  (from an eccentric DIY publisher in Arizona) and 
Freedom (the anarchist newspaper/newsletter of long standing out of England), and I cast about and supplemented reading the likes of Emma Goldman's massive and often breathtaking 
Living My Life and Woodcock's and Chomsky's and Daniel Guerin's books, and the likes of Sonia Johnson's political memoirs, with anthologies such as Marshall Shatz's slightly potted but useful and interesting 
Essential Works. It was nice to have early work by such a Green mover and shaker as Daniel Cohn-Bendit handily cheek-by-jowl with that of Paul Goodman, and both brought together with such progenitors as Proudhon and Bakunin, Kropotkin and Godwin. As with Johnson, not a few of the feminists I was reading voraciously as well, very much including Joanna Russ and the all but anarchist Ursula Le Guin, were echoing much of what the left-libertarian foremothers had noted, applying it to new circumstances. Both on my last academic campus, George Mason University, and off, I grew more involved with the anarchist, libertarian-socialist, Green and other activities at hand, and helped start a few. Very busy times. And some very good reading, to say the least.
Tables of Contents:
For the Platt, from WorldCat:
  | 
| The first anthology. | 
Description: xv, 300 p. : ports. ; 21 cm. 
Contents: 
Jerry Pournelle --
Larry Niven --
Christopher Priest --
William S. Burroughs --
Arthur C. Clarke --
Alvin Toffler --
John Sladek --
D.M. Thomas --
Keith Roberts --
Andre Norton --
Piers Anthony --
Keith Laumer --
Joe Haldeman --
Fritz Leiber --
Robert Anton Wilson --
Poul Anderson --
Jack Vance --
Theodore Sturgeon --
L. Ron Hubbard --
Joanna Russ --
Janet Morris --
  | 
| The best of/third edition. | 
Joan D. Vinge --
Harry Harrison --
Donald A. Wollheim --
Edward L. Ferman --
Kit Reed --
James Tiptree, Jr. --
Stephen King. 
Responsibility: by Charles Platt. 
for the Shatz, from the table of contents in the online version, link above:
Preface  ix  
Introduction  xi  
Part I. Anarchism in Theory: Classics of Anarchist 
Thought  1  
WILLIAM GODWIN: The Father of Anarchism   
Enquiry Concerning Political Justice  3  
MAX STIRNER: Individualist Anarchism   
The Ego and His Own  42  
PIERRE-JOSEPH PROUDHON: Mutualist 
  | 
| A Bantam mm paperback! | 
Anarchism   
General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth 
Century  81  
MICHAEL BAKUNIN: Revolutionary Anarchism   
God and the State  123  
Statism and Anarchy  155  
PETER KROPOTKIN: Anarchist Communism   
The Conquest of Bread  184  
LEO TOLSTOY: Christian Anarchism   
The Kingdom of God Is Within You  229  
Part II. The Mind of the Anarchist: Memoirs and 
Autobiographies  267  
PETER KROPOTKIN : The "Repentant 
Nobleman"   
Memoirs of a Revolutionist  269  
EMMA GOLDMAN: Anarchism and the 
Liberated Woman   
Living My Life  312  
ALEXANDER BERKMAN: "Propaganda by 
the Deed"   
Prison Memoirs of an Anarchist  356  
RUDOLF ROCKER: The Anarchist "Melting Pot"   
The London Years  393  
Part III. Anarchism in Practice: Firsthand 
Descriptions  423  
JOSIAH WARREN: The Cincinnati Time Store 
and the Modern Times Colony   
Practical Details in Equitable Commerce  425  
Practical Applications of the Elementary Principles 
of "True Civilization"  443  
VOLINE: Nestor Makhno and Anarchism in the 
Russian Revolution   
The Unknown Revolution  450  
FRANZ BORKENAU: The Anarchists in the 
Spanish Civil War   
The Spanish Cockpit  484  
 Part IV. Anarchism Today: Anarchist Themes in 
the Contemporary World  515  
HERBERT READ: Anarchism and Man's 
Freedom   
Existentialism, Marxism and Anarchism  517  
DANIEL GUÉRIN: Workers' Self-Management 
of Industry   
Anarchism  539  
DANIEL AND GABRIEL COHN-BENDIT: 
Anarchism and Student Revolt   
Obsolete Communism: The Left-Wing Alternative  553  
ROEL VAN DUYN: The Kabouters of Holland   
Proclamation of the Orange Free State  569  
PAUL AND PERCIVAL GOODMAN: Restoration 
of the Community   
Communitas  575  
Suggestions for Further Reading  598  
Index of Persons  601  
For more "forgotten" books in the midst of college-years memoirs, see 
Patti Abbott's blog for a guide to the other participants...