‘60s Flashback
Vietnam. Jefferson Airplane, LSD, and prescription pills. Peace, love, flower children and napalm. Growing up in Middle-class America during the ‘60s was . . .
The Book
The House on the Path
Not your average middle-class teenager. By age 13, Brad Morgan was reselling cigarettes from an old machine in a pizza joint basement. Things were starting to get complicated. His "clairvoyant " mother married a doctor who headed the U.S. Theosophical Society. They lived in a tony house outside of Chicago with a bathroom cabinet full of mothers-little-helpers. The U.S. was napalm bombing Vietnam to the tune of "All You Need Is Love" when his buddy turned him onto a new concept. They could sell the old man's prescription drugs on the street for big bucks. Brad Morgan's foray into capitalism entered a whole new dimension in 1967. And that was just the beginning.
About the Author
Will Guthrie
William Guthrie grew up in the suburbs near Chicago as Brad Morgan. His middle-class life included a few oddities such as his psychic mother escaping marriage to a foreign CIA operative, his stepfather presiding over the Theosophical Society, and Dr. J. Allen Hynek (the U.S. Air Force’s UFO expert from Project Bluebook) regularly coming to dinner. But it was a fairly ordinary life until the streets exploded with the '60s cultural revolution. Peace, love and rock-n-roll were a lot more interesting than what was happening in the classroom.
Hoping to direct his creative energies towards art, his mother, Jo Anna, enrolled young Brad in the prestigious Francis Parker School in the big city, but it just brought him closer to the Chicago underground where the action was.
From dealing his old man's prescription drugs to scoring mysterious packages of hallucinogens through a mail slot at a Northside address, Brad ran wild and ran away, and after a classic fight with his stepfather, he hitchhiked across America to new and different experiences such as Albuquerque and peyote.
In the '60s, this type of scenario would end with a police officer retrieving the errant child and toting him or her back home at the request of the parents. But Jo Anna helped him when he got in trouble and let him run.
As the summer of '68 faded into the winter of '69, Brad went home feeling like a very old teenager. Things were changing--not just for him--but for America. Jo Anna was creating something America had never seen before. She purchased a 900-acre, spring-fed farm in Wisconsin, and was planning America's first authentic farm-to-table restaurant. It was a huge undertaking, but she was determined to bring the European dining experience to America. As she put the finishing touches on her Ovens of Brittany restaurant that utilized locally sourced ingredients, Alice Waters, with the same idea, opened Chez Panisse two thousand miles away in Berkley. With lines around the block, Brad was thrown into a major overnight success story. The new restaurant captured him. In the midst of it all, Jo Anna insisted he change his name to William Guthrie, keeping her family name, and she would become JoAnnae, in deference to Scotland that inspired the creation of the restaurant. So it was; and the newly anointed William was married at 18. Intrigue and treachery undermined the restaurant and eventually shut it down. Young William jettisoned to the Playboy Club in Lake Geneva where he began experiencing the intense, unpredictable life in America's high-end restaurant kitchens. Working his way up the ladder put him on the road to being threatened by crazy French chefs brandishing flaming hot pans in the dens of haute cuisine. But his street smarts landed him his own restaurants, and eventually his own novel idea. This is the story.“Destroy the seed of evil, or it will grow up to your ruin.”
Reviews
Please send your reviews to willguthrieusa@willguthrieusa.com
Hi
I recently came across your work, and I was really struck by the honesty in your storytelling and the way you blend personal experience with universal truth. As a fellow author, I deeply appreciate writing that challenges and moves readers the way yours does.
I just wanted to reach out to say how much I admired your work. It's inspiring to see writing that’s both fearless and artful.
Warm regards
John B
Amazon Customer James Terry
5 out of 5 stars Wild Whirlwind of a Journey
Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2026 Verified Purchase
The House on the Path by Will Guthrie is a wild whirlwind of a journey. Set in the late 1960s to the early 1970s, in the Chicago/Wisconsin area, it’s a coming of age/prodigal son epic. The book also explores an ambitious philosophical society: the Phoenix Academy of Cultural Exploration and Design and a trendsetting restaurant and bakery: the Ovens of Brittany – both brainchildren of the author’s mother, JoAnnae Guthrie. The House on the Path is humorous, irreverent and honest and will be of interest to anyone wondering what it was like to be immersed in the hippie culture or existence as a teen drug dealer. Especially vibrant is Mr. Guthrie’s recounting of his time at a Woodstock-sized rock festival in central Georgia, the 1970 Atlanta Pop Fest. You will also get a good flavor of the Chicago music scene, including some of the lesser-known artists like Baby Huey or nearly forgotten classic recordings like "Fathers and Sons" by Muddy Waters. Importantly, the House on the Path also explores the very real reactions of a young man to the counterculture movement as epitomized by Timothy Leary and America’s turmoil during the Vietnam War. Worth your time. Five stars.
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"The House on the Path" is available in paperback formats
Paperback book. Published by MileStones International Publishers 2026. 333 pages.
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