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Born: 03/12/1922; Died: 10/21/1969Jack Kerouac Biography & Notes
Jack Kerouac (March 12, 1922- October 21, 1969) was an American novelist, writer, poet, artist, and part of the Beat Generation. While enjoying popular but little critical success during his own lifetime, Kerouac is now considered one of America's most important authors. Kerouac's spontaneous, confessional language style inspired other writers, including Tom Robbins, Richard Brautigan, Hunter S. Thompson, Ken Kesey, and Bob Dylan.
Most of his life was spent in the vast landscapes of America or in the apartment of his mother, with whom he lived most of his life. Faced with a changing country, Kerouac sought to find his place, eventually bringing him to reject the values of the fifties. His writing often reflects a desire to break free from society's mold and to find meaning in life. This search may have led him to experiment with drugs (he used psilocybin, marijuana, and benzedrine, among others), to study spiritual teachings such as Buddhism, and to embark on trips around the world. His books are sometimes credited as the catalyst for the 1960s counterculture. Kerouac's best known works are On the Road and The Dharma Bums.
Kerouac was born Jean-Louis Louis Kerouac, in Lowell, Massachusetts, to a family of Franco-Americans. His parents, Leo-Alcide Kerouac and Gabrielle-Ange Levesque, were natives of the province of Quebec in Canada. Like many other Quebecers of their generation, the Levesques and Kerouacs were part of the Quebec emigration to New England to find employment. Jack didn't start to learn English until the age of six. At home, he and his family spoke Quebec French. At an early age, he was profoundly marked by the death of his elder brother Gerard, later prompting him to write the book Visions of Gerard.
Later, his athletic prowess led him to become a star on his local football team, and this achievement earned him scholarships to Boston College and Columbia University in New York. He entered Columbia University after spending the scholarship's required year at Horace Mann School. It was in New York that Kerouac met the people with whom he was to journey around the world, and the subjects of many of his novels: the so-called Beat Generation, which included people such as Allen Ginsberg, Neal Cassady and William S. Burroughs. Kerouac broke his leg playing football, and he argued with his coach; his football scholarship did not pan out. He joined the Merchant Marine in 1942. In 1943, he joined the United States Navy, but was discharged during World War II on psychiatric grounds, he was of "indifferent disposition."
During Kerouac's time at Columbia University, Burroughs and Kerouac got into trouble with the law for failing to report a murder; this incident formed the basis of a mystery novel the two collaborated on in 1945 entitled And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks (the novel was never published, although an excerpt from the manuscript would be included in the Burroughs compilation Word Virus). In between his sea voyages, Kerouac stayed in New York with friends from Fordham. He started writing his first novel, called The Town and the City. It was published in 1950 under the name "John Kerouac" and earned him some respect as a writer. Unlike Kerouac's later work which establish his Beat style, "The Town and the City" is heavily influenced by Kerouac's reading of Thomas Wolfe.
Kerouac wrote constantly, but did not publish his next novel, On the Road, until 1957. It was published by Viking Press. Narrated from the point of view of the character Sal Paradise, this mostly autobiographical work of fiction described his roadtrip adventures across the United States and into Mexico with Neal Cassady, the model for Dean Moriarty in the book. In a way, the story is an offspring of Mark Twain's classic Huckleberry Finn, though in On the Road the narrator (Sal Paradise) is twice Huck's age, and Kerouac's story is set in the America of about a hundred years after. The novel is often described as the defining work of the post-World War II jazz, poetry, and drug affected Beat Generation; it made Kerouac "the king of the beat generation." Using Benzedrine and coffee, Kerouac wrote the entire novel in in an extended session of spontaneous prose, his original writing style, heavily influenced by Jazz (especially Bebop), and later Buddhism. Kerouac was hailed as a major American writer, and reluctantly as the voice of the Beat Generation. His fame would come as an unmanageable surge that would ultimately be his undoing.
His friendship with Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs and Gregory Corso, among others, defined a generation. Kerouac also wrote and narrated a "Beat" movie titled Pull My Daisy in 1958. In 1954, Kerouac discovered Dwight Goddard's A Buddhist Bible at the San Jose Library, which then marked the beginning of his studies of Buddhism and his own personal quest for enlightenment. He chronicled parts of this, as well as some of his adventures with Gary Snyder, in the book The Dharma Bums, set in Northern California and published in 1958. Kerouac developed something of a friendship with the scholar Alan Watts (cryptically named Arthur Wayne in Kerouac's novel Big Sur, and Alex Aums in Desolation Angels). He also met and had discussions with the famous Japanese Zen Buddhist authority D.T. Suzuki. At some point in his life Kerouac wrote Wake Up, a biography of Siddhartha Gautama (better known as the Buddha) that remains unpublished. Shortly prior to his death Kerouac told interviewer Joseph Lelyveld of the New York Times, "I'm not a beatnik. I'm a Catholic." After pointing to a painting of Pope Paul VI, Kerouac noted, "You know who painted that? Me."
He died on October 21, 1969 at St. Anthony's Hospital in St. Petersburg, Florida, from an internal hemorrhage caused by cirrhosis of the liver at the age of 47, the unfortunate result of a life of heavy drinking. He was living at the time with his third wife Stella, and his mother Gabrielle. He is buried in his home town of Lowell.
Kerouac realized his desire to be a writer when he was in his teens, probably influenced by his father, a linotypist with a command of words. His unique style of writing wouldn't emerge until after his college years, after he wrote his first novel, "The Town and the City". He would often write while intoxicated with some substance, usually Benzedrine strips he would purge from over-the-counter inhalers, marijuana, and alcohol. He claimed that they, particularly "Bennies", enhanced his writing by giving him the tremendous energy that this kind of writing required. Kerouac is considered by some as the "King of the Beatniks" as well as the "Father of the Hippies". Kerouac publicly disavowed the Beatniks, who didn't identify with his blue-collar roots, and disliked the Hippies, largely because his politics shifted to the right in the 1960s and he supported the Vietnam War. He also accused former associate Allen Ginsberg of "raping" his mind.
Kerouac's method was heavily influenced by the prolific explosion of Jazz, especially the Bebop genre established by Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, and others. Later, Kerouac would include ideas he developed in his Buddhist studies. He called this style Spontaneous Prose, a literary technique akin to stream of consciousness. Kerouac's motto was "first-thought=best thought", and many of his books exemplified this approach including On the Road, Visions of Cody, Visions of Gerard, Big Sur, and The Subterraneans. The central features of this writing method was the idea of breath (borrowed from Jazz and from Buddhist meditation breathing), improvising words over the inherent structures of mind and language, and not editing a single word. Connected with his idea of breath was the elimination of the period, preferring to use a long, connecting dash instead. As such, the phrases occurring between dashes might resemble improvisational jazz licks. When spoken, the words might take on a certain kind of rhythm, though none of it pre-meditated.
He would go on for hours to friends and strangers about his method, often drunk, which wasn't well received by Ginsberg, who had an acute awareness of the need to sell literature (to publishers) as much as write it; though he'd later be one of its great proponents. It was at about the time that Kerouac wrote The Subterraneans that he was approached by Ginsberg and others to formally explicate exactly how he wrote it, how he did Spontaneous Prose. Among the writings he set down specifically about his Spontaneous Prose method, the most concise would be Belief and Technique for Modern Prose, a list of thirty "essentials."
* 1. Scribbled secret notebooks, and wild typewritten pages, for your own joy
* 2. Submissive to everything, open, listening
* 3. Try never get drunk outside yr own house
* 4. Be in love with yr life
* 5. Something that you feel will find its own form
* 6. Be crazy dumbsaint of the mind
* 7. Blow as deep as you want to blow
* 8. Write what you want bottomless from bottom of the mind
* 9. The unspeakable visions of the individual
* 10. No time for poetry but exactly what is
* 11. Visionary tics shivering in the chest
* 12. In tranced fixation dreaming upon object before you
* 13. Remove literary, grammatical and syntactical inhibition
* 14. Like Proust be an old teahead of time
* 15. Telling the true story of the world in interior monolog
* 16. The jewel center of interest is the eye within the eye
* 17. Write in recollection and amazement for yourself
* 18. Work from pithy middle eye out, swimming in language sea
* 19. Accept loss forever
* 20. Believe in the holy contour of life
* 21. Struggle to sketch the flow that already exists intact in mind
* 22. Dont think of words when you stop but to see picture better
* 23. Keep track of every day the date emblazoned in yr morning
* 24. No fear or shame in the dignity of yr experience, language & knowledge
* 25. Write for the world to read and see yr exact pictures of it
* 26. Bookmovie is the movie in words, the visual American form
* 27. In praise of Character in the Bleak inhuman Loneliness
* 28. Composing wild, undisciplined, pure, coming in from under, crazier the better
* 29. You're a Genius all the time
* 30. Writer-Director of Earthly movies Sponsored & Angeled in Heaven
Some believed that at times Kerouac's writing technique did not produce lively or energetic prose. Truman Capote famously said about Kerouac's work, "That's not writing, it's typing."
A DVD entitled "Kerouac: King of the Beats" features several minutes of his appearance on Firing Line, William F. Buckley's television show, during Kerouac's later years when alcoholism had taken control. He is seen often incoherent and very drunk. Books also continue to be published that were written by Kerouac, many unfinished by him. A book of his haikus and dreams also were published, giving interesting insight into how his mind worked. In August 2001, most of his letters, journals, notebooks and manuscripts were sold to the New York Public Library for an undisclosed sum. Presently, Douglas Brinkley has exclusive access to parts of this archive until 2005. The first collection of edited journals, Wind Blown World, was published in 2004.
Suggestions or corrections for the editor? Click here.
Most of his life was spent in the vast landscapes of America or in the apartment of his mother, with whom he lived most of his life. Faced with a changing country, Kerouac sought to find his place, eventually bringing him to reject the values of the fifties. His writing often reflects a desire to break free from society's mold and to find meaning in life. This search may have led him to experiment with drugs (he used psilocybin, marijuana, and benzedrine, among others), to study spiritual teachings such as Buddhism, and to embark on trips around the world. His books are sometimes credited as the catalyst for the 1960s counterculture. Kerouac's best known works are On the Road and The Dharma Bums.
Kerouac was born Jean-Louis Louis Kerouac, in Lowell, Massachusetts, to a family of Franco-Americans. His parents, Leo-Alcide Kerouac and Gabrielle-Ange Levesque, were natives of the province of Quebec in Canada. Like many other Quebecers of their generation, the Levesques and Kerouacs were part of the Quebec emigration to New England to find employment. Jack didn't start to learn English until the age of six. At home, he and his family spoke Quebec French. At an early age, he was profoundly marked by the death of his elder brother Gerard, later prompting him to write the book Visions of Gerard.
Later, his athletic prowess led him to become a star on his local football team, and this achievement earned him scholarships to Boston College and Columbia University in New York. He entered Columbia University after spending the scholarship's required year at Horace Mann School. It was in New York that Kerouac met the people with whom he was to journey around the world, and the subjects of many of his novels: the so-called Beat Generation, which included people such as Allen Ginsberg, Neal Cassady and William S. Burroughs. Kerouac broke his leg playing football, and he argued with his coach; his football scholarship did not pan out. He joined the Merchant Marine in 1942. In 1943, he joined the United States Navy, but was discharged during World War II on psychiatric grounds, he was of "indifferent disposition."
During Kerouac's time at Columbia University, Burroughs and Kerouac got into trouble with the law for failing to report a murder; this incident formed the basis of a mystery novel the two collaborated on in 1945 entitled And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks (the novel was never published, although an excerpt from the manuscript would be included in the Burroughs compilation Word Virus). In between his sea voyages, Kerouac stayed in New York with friends from Fordham. He started writing his first novel, called The Town and the City. It was published in 1950 under the name "John Kerouac" and earned him some respect as a writer. Unlike Kerouac's later work which establish his Beat style, "The Town and the City" is heavily influenced by Kerouac's reading of Thomas Wolfe.
Kerouac wrote constantly, but did not publish his next novel, On the Road, until 1957. It was published by Viking Press. Narrated from the point of view of the character Sal Paradise, this mostly autobiographical work of fiction described his roadtrip adventures across the United States and into Mexico with Neal Cassady, the model for Dean Moriarty in the book. In a way, the story is an offspring of Mark Twain's classic Huckleberry Finn, though in On the Road the narrator (Sal Paradise) is twice Huck's age, and Kerouac's story is set in the America of about a hundred years after. The novel is often described as the defining work of the post-World War II jazz, poetry, and drug affected Beat Generation; it made Kerouac "the king of the beat generation." Using Benzedrine and coffee, Kerouac wrote the entire novel in in an extended session of spontaneous prose, his original writing style, heavily influenced by Jazz (especially Bebop), and later Buddhism. Kerouac was hailed as a major American writer, and reluctantly as the voice of the Beat Generation. His fame would come as an unmanageable surge that would ultimately be his undoing.
His friendship with Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs and Gregory Corso, among others, defined a generation. Kerouac also wrote and narrated a "Beat" movie titled Pull My Daisy in 1958. In 1954, Kerouac discovered Dwight Goddard's A Buddhist Bible at the San Jose Library, which then marked the beginning of his studies of Buddhism and his own personal quest for enlightenment. He chronicled parts of this, as well as some of his adventures with Gary Snyder, in the book The Dharma Bums, set in Northern California and published in 1958. Kerouac developed something of a friendship with the scholar Alan Watts (cryptically named Arthur Wayne in Kerouac's novel Big Sur, and Alex Aums in Desolation Angels). He also met and had discussions with the famous Japanese Zen Buddhist authority D.T. Suzuki. At some point in his life Kerouac wrote Wake Up, a biography of Siddhartha Gautama (better known as the Buddha) that remains unpublished. Shortly prior to his death Kerouac told interviewer Joseph Lelyveld of the New York Times, "I'm not a beatnik. I'm a Catholic." After pointing to a painting of Pope Paul VI, Kerouac noted, "You know who painted that? Me."
He died on October 21, 1969 at St. Anthony's Hospital in St. Petersburg, Florida, from an internal hemorrhage caused by cirrhosis of the liver at the age of 47, the unfortunate result of a life of heavy drinking. He was living at the time with his third wife Stella, and his mother Gabrielle. He is buried in his home town of Lowell.
Kerouac realized his desire to be a writer when he was in his teens, probably influenced by his father, a linotypist with a command of words. His unique style of writing wouldn't emerge until after his college years, after he wrote his first novel, "The Town and the City". He would often write while intoxicated with some substance, usually Benzedrine strips he would purge from over-the-counter inhalers, marijuana, and alcohol. He claimed that they, particularly "Bennies", enhanced his writing by giving him the tremendous energy that this kind of writing required. Kerouac is considered by some as the "King of the Beatniks" as well as the "Father of the Hippies". Kerouac publicly disavowed the Beatniks, who didn't identify with his blue-collar roots, and disliked the Hippies, largely because his politics shifted to the right in the 1960s and he supported the Vietnam War. He also accused former associate Allen Ginsberg of "raping" his mind.
Kerouac's method was heavily influenced by the prolific explosion of Jazz, especially the Bebop genre established by Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, and others. Later, Kerouac would include ideas he developed in his Buddhist studies. He called this style Spontaneous Prose, a literary technique akin to stream of consciousness. Kerouac's motto was "first-thought=best thought", and many of his books exemplified this approach including On the Road, Visions of Cody, Visions of Gerard, Big Sur, and The Subterraneans. The central features of this writing method was the idea of breath (borrowed from Jazz and from Buddhist meditation breathing), improvising words over the inherent structures of mind and language, and not editing a single word. Connected with his idea of breath was the elimination of the period, preferring to use a long, connecting dash instead. As such, the phrases occurring between dashes might resemble improvisational jazz licks. When spoken, the words might take on a certain kind of rhythm, though none of it pre-meditated.
He would go on for hours to friends and strangers about his method, often drunk, which wasn't well received by Ginsberg, who had an acute awareness of the need to sell literature (to publishers) as much as write it; though he'd later be one of its great proponents. It was at about the time that Kerouac wrote The Subterraneans that he was approached by Ginsberg and others to formally explicate exactly how he wrote it, how he did Spontaneous Prose. Among the writings he set down specifically about his Spontaneous Prose method, the most concise would be Belief and Technique for Modern Prose, a list of thirty "essentials."
* 1. Scribbled secret notebooks, and wild typewritten pages, for your own joy
* 2. Submissive to everything, open, listening
* 3. Try never get drunk outside yr own house
* 4. Be in love with yr life
* 5. Something that you feel will find its own form
* 6. Be crazy dumbsaint of the mind
* 7. Blow as deep as you want to blow
* 8. Write what you want bottomless from bottom of the mind
* 9. The unspeakable visions of the individual
* 10. No time for poetry but exactly what is
* 11. Visionary tics shivering in the chest
* 12. In tranced fixation dreaming upon object before you
* 13. Remove literary, grammatical and syntactical inhibition
* 14. Like Proust be an old teahead of time
* 15. Telling the true story of the world in interior monolog
* 16. The jewel center of interest is the eye within the eye
* 17. Write in recollection and amazement for yourself
* 18. Work from pithy middle eye out, swimming in language sea
* 19. Accept loss forever
* 20. Believe in the holy contour of life
* 21. Struggle to sketch the flow that already exists intact in mind
* 22. Dont think of words when you stop but to see picture better
* 23. Keep track of every day the date emblazoned in yr morning
* 24. No fear or shame in the dignity of yr experience, language & knowledge
* 25. Write for the world to read and see yr exact pictures of it
* 26. Bookmovie is the movie in words, the visual American form
* 27. In praise of Character in the Bleak inhuman Loneliness
* 28. Composing wild, undisciplined, pure, coming in from under, crazier the better
* 29. You're a Genius all the time
* 30. Writer-Director of Earthly movies Sponsored & Angeled in Heaven
Some believed that at times Kerouac's writing technique did not produce lively or energetic prose. Truman Capote famously said about Kerouac's work, "That's not writing, it's typing."
A DVD entitled "Kerouac: King of the Beats" features several minutes of his appearance on Firing Line, William F. Buckley's television show, during Kerouac's later years when alcoholism had taken control. He is seen often incoherent and very drunk. Books also continue to be published that were written by Kerouac, many unfinished by him. A book of his haikus and dreams also were published, giving interesting insight into how his mind worked. In August 2001, most of his letters, journals, notebooks and manuscripts were sold to the New York Public Library for an undisclosed sum. Presently, Douglas Brinkley has exclusive access to parts of this archive until 2005. The first collection of edited journals, Wind Blown World, was published in 2004.
Suggestions or corrections for the editor? Click here.
Suggestions or corrections for the editor? Click here.
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"Forest Beatniks" and "Urban Thoreaus Gary Snyder, Jack Kerouac, Lew Welch, and Michael McClure by Jack Kerouac, Michael McClure, Gary Snyder, Rod Phillips, Lew Welch ( 2000) |
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The Americans by ( 2008)
In 1955, photographer Robert Frank, who had perfected his craft in the employ of magazines like Vogue and Life, abandoned his comfortable career and embarked on a tour of America which eventually encompassed two years and more than 28,000 photographs. Frank painstakingly selected 83 images of bus stations, drug stores, street corners, tenement buildings, taverns, picnics, funerals, parties, cops, cowboys, cars and empty parking lots, all of which embodied the aching bravado and sullen celebration of the American people. But Frank's pictures are much more than candid snapshots-he brilliantly distorted and manipulated the conventions of photography, using shadows, canted angles, blurred focus and skewed composition to better expose the essence of his subjects. Like many works of genius, THE AMERICANS was met by near unanimous critical disdain, though at least one literary figure recognized Frank's stunning achievement--Jack Kerouac wrote the ardent introduction for the first American edition of the book, which overflows with copious doses of his rambling ebullience. Fifty years after its initial publication, THE AMERICANS has accumulated the aura and adulation of a masterpiece, and is now recognized as one of the most important books of photography ever published.
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And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks by William S. Burroughs, Jack Kerouac ( 2009) |
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And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks Library Edition by William S. Burroughs, Jack Kerouac ( 2008)
A collaborative detective novel by Beat icons Jack Kerouac and William Burroughs, AND THE HIPPOS WERE BOILED IN THEIR TANKS was inspired by the real-life murder by their New York drinking buddy Lucien Carr, a brilliant Rimbaud-loving teenager who ended up killing his longtime homosexual stalker in Riverside Park and throwing the body into the Hudson River. Kerouac and Burroughs took turns writing chapters, with Burroughs writing about a bartender turned detective and Kerouac about a dissolute ex-Merchant Marine. Despite the murder mystery element, for the most part this novel describes the sordid, dreary lifestyle of restless young men living in New York at the end of World War II. First published in 2008, AND THE HIPPOS WERE BOILED IN THEIR TANKS is a decidedly amateur work, and the writing is a far cry from the distinctive voices the two writers would later develop, but it remains an intriguing literary relic from the early days of the Beat movement.
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And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks by William S. Burroughs, Jack Kerouac ( 2008)
A never-before-published fictional account of the 1944 murder of David Kammerer by Lucien Carr, a friend of William S. Burroughs and Jack Kerouac, is written in the form of noir crime novel, with the two authors writing alternating voices from the perspectives of a bartender with ties to the criminal underworld and a hard-drinking merchant marine.
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And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks by William S. Burroughs, Jack Kerouac ( 2008)
A never-before-published fictional account of the 1944 murder of David Kammerer by Lucien Carr, a friend of William S. Burroughs and Jack Kerouac, is written in the form of noir crime novel, with the two authors writing alternating voices from the perspectives of a bartender with ties to the criminal underworld and a hard-drinking merchant marine. Simultaneous.
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And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks Library Edition by William S. Burroughs, Jack Kerouac, William S. Burrows ( 2008)
A never-before-published fictional account of the 1944 murder of David Kammerer by Lucien Carr, a friend of William S. Burroughs and Jack Kerouac, is written in the form of noir crime novel, with the two authors writing alternating voices from the perspectives of a bartender with ties to the criminal underworld and a hard-drinking merchant marine. Simultaneous.
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Atop an Underwood by Jack Kerouac ( 2000)
The work that made Jack Kerouac famous shows its roots in this collection of his juvenilia. This book includes sketches and stories from Kerouac's teenage and early college years and a fragment of a novel he wrote about his tenure in the Merchant Marines.
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Atop an Underwood Early Stories and Other Writings by ( 1999)
The work that made Jack Kerouac famous shows its roots in this collection of his juvenilia. This book includes sketches and stories from Kerouac's teenage and early college years and a fragment of a novel he wrote about his tenure in the Merchant Marines.
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Beat Generation by Jack Kerouac, Et Al, Lenny Bruce ( 1992) |
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Big Sur by Jack Kerouac ( 1992)
Retiring to a seaside cabin near San Francisco, Jack Duluoz looks for tranquility, but finds only horror and despair.
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Book of Blues by Jack Kerouac ( 1995)
Although he is best known as a writer of prose, Jack Kerouac was an important poet, his work described by Michael McClure as "startling in its majesty and comedy and gentleness and vision". These eight extended poems, composed between 1954 and 1961, offer exuberant forays into language and consciousness that combine rich imagery, complex internal rhythms, and a reverent attentiveness to the moments.
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Book of Dreams by Jack Kerouac ( 2001)
A record of the writer's actual dreams is populated by characters from his novels.
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Book of Haikus by Jack Kerouac, Regina Weinreich ( 2003)
A masterful anthology of more than five hundred haiku poems by one of the leaders of the Beat Generation and author of On the Road explores Kerouac's experimentation with the concise poetic form as examples appeared in his journals, sketchbooks, recordings, notebooks, letters, and fiction. Original.
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Book of Sketches 1952-57 by Jack Kerouac ( 2006)
A previously unpublished compilation of poetry by the late Beat Generation author of On the Road records his wanderings around America, offering observations, meditations, and travelogues in a series of prose poems that discuss his travels to New York, North Carolina, San Francisco, Denver, Kansas, and Lowell, Massachusetts, while reflecting on art and life. Original.
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Departed Angels The Lost Paintings by Jack Kerouac, Ed Adler ( 2004)
The first published collection of artwork by author Jack Kerouac features paintings, drawings, and sketches from his unpublished notebooks, as well as text by Ed Adler discussing Kerouac's relationship with the visual arts as well the influence of Buddhism and Catholicism on his creative vision. Original.
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Desolation Angels by Jack Kerouac ( 1995)
The classic novel from the definitive voice of the Beat Generation, Desolation Angels is the story of Kerouac's life just before the publication of On the Road--as told through his fictional self--Jack Duluoz. As he hitches, walks, and talks his way across the world, Duluoz perceives the angel that is in everything. It is life as he sees it.
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Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac, Helga Schneider ( 2004) |
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Dharma Bums 50th Anniversary Edition by Jack Kerouac ( 2008)
Another autobiographical novel from Kerouac, THE DHARMA BUMS, encompasses the ideals of freedom set forth by Whitman and Thoreau, with Buddhism thrown in for good measure. Focusing on the friendship between Ray Smith (modelled on Kerouac) and Japhy Ryder (Gary Snyder), the Buddhist sub-theme is evoked in Smith and Ryder's wish to introduce the concept of Dharma to others. Acknowledged by Kerouac scholars to be a more mature work than ON THE ROAD, THE DHARMA BUMS is called "perhaps the most representative expression of the Beat sensibility in a work of fiction" by Sue L. Kimball in "Critical Survey of Long Fiction."
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Doctor Sax Faust Part Three by Jack Kerouac ( 1988)
Kerouac wrote this novel in 1952, five years before ON THE ROAD was published. It is, like his other works, highly autobiographical; it tells the story of Jack Duluoz, a French-Canadian boy coming of age in a New England mill town. Despite panning it almost universally, critics nevertheless found themselves acknowledging Kerouac's "peculiar genius," as David Dempsey put it in his New York Times review of May 3, 1959.
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Doctor Sax and the Great World Snake by Jack Kerouac ( 2003) |
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Door Wide Open A Beat Love Affair in Letters, 1957-1958 by Jack Kerouac, Joyce Johnson ( 2001)
A collection of poignant love letters between Jack Kerouac and Joyce Glassman reveals a tender, loving side to a writer famous for his rough exterior and moody ways. Reprint.
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En El Camino by Jack Kerouac ( 2003) |
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Big Sur by Jack Kerouac ( 2000)
Duluoz, the protagonist previously of DOCTOR SAX, has written a book entitled ON THE ROAD. Suddenly, he's deified by young people who pursue him in search of wisdom. Overwhelmed, Duluoz runs to Big Sur, to revisit his own past. Alcoholic, alone in his cabin, he disintegrates--then goes back home.
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Good Blonde & Others by Jack Kerouac ( 1993)
In these uncollected writings Jack Kerouac portrays himself in his life. He hitches a ride to San Francisco with a blonde, goes on the road with photographer Robert Frank, rides bus through the Northwest and Montana, records the blues of an old Negro hobo, talks about the Beats and how it all began, gives his "Essentials of Spontaneous Prose" and defends his novel The Subterraneans, compares Shakespeare and James Joyce, describes the cafeterias and subways of Manhattan, goes to a ballgame and a prize fight, and reflects on Christmas in New England, on Murnau's Nosferatu, on jazz & bop, and tells us what he's thinking about.
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Heaven and Other Poems by Jack Kerouac ( 1981)
Heaven and a choice of poems sent to editor Donald Allen for anthology and magazine publication. With a selection of jack's letters on his poetry and a biographical note.
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Jack Kerouac Selected Letters, 1957-1969 by Jack Kerouac, Ann Charters ( 1999)
Viking's 1995 publication of the first volume of Jack Kerouac's letters was seen as a major addition to Kerouac scholarship and helped contribute to a new appraisal of Kerouac's legacy and his position in the American literary landscape. This second and final volume of letters, which begins in 1957, the year of the publication of On the Road, and ends in October, 1969, two days before Kerouac's death, should do the same. As in the first volume, Charters has been guided in her choice of letters by her desire to create a "life-in-letters" in which Kerouac has the opportunity to tell the story of his life as eloquently as he did in his "true-story" novels. Rich and intense letters to friends and confidants -- among them William Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Gary Snyder, Philip Whalen, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Sterling Lord, and Malcolm Cowley -- illuminate Kerouac's development as a writer, as well as demonstrating how the publication of his books and the attendant publicity and hostile critical response to his work nearly destroyed him. The volume is edited with extensive headnotes and footnotes by Charters.
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Jack Kerouac The Bootleg Era A Bibliography of Pirated Editions by Jack Kerouac ( 1994) |
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Jack Kerouac Road Novels 1957-1960 On the Road/The Dharma Bums/The Subterraneans/Tritessa/Lonesome Traveler/From the Journals 1949-1954 by Jack Kerouac ( 1996)
The life and craft of Jack Kerouac are traced through some of his most personal and mesmerizing letters. Written between 1940, when he was a freshman in college, and 1956, immediately before his leap into celebrity with the publication of On the Road, these letters offer valuable insights into Kerouac's family life, friendships with Neal Cassady, Allen Ginsberg, and William S. Burroughs, and others.
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The Jack Kerouac Collection by Jack Kerouac ( 1990)
Presents a collection of the Beat poet's works.
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The Kerouac We Knew by Jack Kerouac ( 1992) |
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Lonesome Traveler by Jack Kerouac ( 1985)
Kerouac described this exhilarating story of his years spend writing the books that captivated and infuriated the reading public as "life lived by an independent, educated, penniless rake going anywhere."
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Maggie Cassidy by Jack Kerouac ( 1993)
Written in 1953, published in 1959 (after the 1957 publication of Kerouac's On the Road made him famous overnight) and long out of print, this touching novel of adolescent love in a New England mill town is one of Kerouac's most accessible works.
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Lonesome Traveller by Jack Kerouac ( 1996)
One of Kerouac's few works of nonfiction, this book chronicles his travels and various jobs as a brakeman, steward on a freighter, and fire lookout.
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Old Angel Midnight by Jack Kerouac ( 1993)
Renowned "Beat Generation" poet and author Jack Kerouac says of OLD ANGEL MIDNIGHT, "(it) is only the beginning of a lifelong work in multilingual sound . . . of babbling world tongues coming in thru my window at midnight no matter where I live or what I'm doing. . . . And it is the only book I've ever written in which I allow myself the right to say anything I want, absolutely and positively anything, since that's what you hear coming in that window. . . ".
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On the Road by Jack Kerouac ( 2007)
Sal Paradise, a young writer, travels from New York to Los Angeles with his friend Dean Moriarty and an assorted hodgepodge of women, bohemians, and others. Rich descriptions of characters, places, and music demonstrate Jack Kerouac's exuberance and his love of the freedom of the road. An autobiographical novel (like most of Kerouac's books), ON THE ROAD involves characters who were the author's real-life friends and Beat cohorts: Neal Cassady, Gregory Corso, Allan Ginsberg, and William Burroughs (here appearing, as in Burroughs's own fiction, as the character Bill Lee). Publishing legend has it that Kerouac typed the manuscript frenziedly on large rolls of Teletype paper, not pausing for revision, and deposited them on the desk of his startled editor. Revolutionary not only in subject matter but also in style, this book (written in 1950) launched the Beat movement and crowned Jack Kerouac its king.
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On the Road by Jack Kerouac ( 1998)
Sal Paradise, a young writer, travels from New York to Los Angeles with his friend Dean Moriarty, and an assorted hodgepodge of women, bohemians, and others. Rich descriptions of characters, places and music show Kerouac's exuberance and his love of the freedom of the road. Revolutionary not only in subject matter but also in style, this book (written in 1950) launched the Beat movement and crowned Jack Kerouac its king. Autobiographical, as are most of Kerouac's books, ON THE ROAD involves characters who were Kerouac's real-life friends and Beat cohorts: Neal Cassady, Gregory Corso, Allan Ginsberg, William Burroughs (here appearing, as in Burroughs's own fiction, as the character Bill Lee). Publishing legend has it that Kerouac typed the manuscript frenziedly on large rolls of Teletype paper, not pausing for revision, and deposited these rolls on the desk of his startled editor.
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On the Road The Original Scroll by Jack Kerouac ( 2008) |
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On the Road The Original Scroll by Jack Kerouac ( 2008) |
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On the Road The Original Scroll by Jack Kerouac ( 2007)
Sal Paradise, a young writer, travels from New York to Los Angeles with his friend Dean Moriarty and an assorted hodgepodge of women, bohemians, and others. Rich descriptions of characters, places, and music demonstrate Jack Kerouac's exuberance and his love of the freedom of the road. An autobiographical novel (like most of Kerouac's books), ON THE ROAD involves characters who were the author's real-life friends and Beat cohorts: Neal Cassady, Gregory Corso, Allan Ginsberg, and William Burroughs (here appearing, as in Burroughs's own fiction, as the character Bill Lee). Publishing legend has it that Kerouac typed the manuscript frenziedly on large rolls of Teletype paper, not pausing for revision, and deposited them on the desk of his startled editor. Revolutionary not only in subject matter but also in style, this book (written in 1950) launched the Beat movement and crowned Jack Kerouac its king.
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On the Road, Text and Criticism by Jack Kerouac ( 1979)
Sal Paradise, a young writer, travels from New York to Los Angeles with his friend Dean Moriarty, and an assorted hodgepodge of women, bohemians, and others. Rich descriptions of characters, places and music show Kerouac's exuberance and his love of the freedom of the road. Revolutionary not only in subject matter but also in style, this book (written in 1950) launched the Beat movement and crowned Jack Kerouac its king. Autobiographical, as are most of Kerouac's books, ON THE ROAD involves characters who were Kerouac's real-life friends and Beat cohorts: Neal Cassady, Gregory Corso, Allan Ginsberg, William Burroughs (here appearing, as in Burroughs's own fiction, as the character Bill Lee). Publishing legend has it that Kerouac typed the manuscript frenziedly on large rolls of Teletype paper, not pausing for revision, and deposited these rolls on the desk of his startled editor.
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Orpheus Emerged by Jack Kerouac ( 2001)
This highly autobiographical work, set at a very Columbia-like university, was written in 1945, when Kerouac was 23.
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Pomes All Sizes by Jack Kerouac ( 1992)
In the 1960s, Kerouac submitted this manuscript to City Lights publishers; unfortunately, it was lost and has remained unpublished until now. Poems from the mid-1950s include observations on traveling, drunkenness, dharma; there are Canuck patois poems, haikus, and blues poems.
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For Jack Kerouac:Poems on His Death Poems on His Death by Jack Kerouac ( 1970) |
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The Portable Jack Kerouac by Jack Kerouac ( 2007)
This anthology combines excerpts from all Kerouac's major novels as well as several short stories and selections of poetry. Also includes his meditations on Buddhism and the Beat aesthetic.
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Lowell, Ma Where Jack Kerouac's Road Begins by Jack Kerouac, Massimo Pacifico, Silvestro Serra ( 1996) |
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Desde El Jardin by Jack Kerouac ( 2004) |
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Robert Frank The Americans by Jack Kerouac, Robert Frank ( 1998)
Previously published in 1959, Frank's most famous and influential photography book contained a series of deceptively simple photos that he took on a trip through America in 1955 and 1956. These pictures of everyday people still speak to us today, 40 years and several generations later.
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Safe in Heaven Dead by Jack Kerouac ( 1990) |
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San Francisco Blues by Jack Kerouac ( 1995) |
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Satori in Paris and Pic by Jack Kerouac ( 1988) |
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Jack Kerouac Selected Letters, 1957-1969 by Jack Kerouac ( 1999)
Volume Two of Kerouac's letters includes correspondence with Burroughs, Ginsberg, Ferlinghetti, and other Beats.
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On the Road by Jack Kerouac ( )
This novel swings to the rhythms of 1950s underground America, jazz, sex, generosity, chill dawns, and drugs, with Sal Paradise and his hero Dean Moriarty, traveller and mystic, the living epitome of beat.
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Scattered Poems by Jack Kerouac ( 1971)
In spontaneous, direct, and concrete verses, the author confesses his joy in poetry and life.
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On the Road by Jack Kerouac ( )
On the Road chronicles Jack Kerouac's years traveling the North American continent with his friend Neal Cassady, "a sideburned hero of the snowy West". As "Sal Paradise" and "Dean Moriarty", the two roam the country in a quest for self-knowledge and experience. Kerouac's love of America, his compassion for humanity, and his sense of language as jazz combine to make On the Road an inspirational work of lasting importance.
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Scripture of the Golden Eternity by Jack Kerouac ( 1994)
These classic Kerouac meditations, Zen koans and prose poems express the poet's beatific quest for peace and joy through oneness with the universe.
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Kerouac at the "Wild Boar" by Jack Kerouac ( 1992) |
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Some of the Dharma by Jack Kerouac ( 1999)
Jack Kerouac's earliest foray into Buddhism is captured in a volume that includes poems, haiku, prayers, journal entries, meditations, letter fragments, ideas, and much more, all assembled in the visually daring format Kerouac originally envisioned. Reprint.
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Sur La Route by Jack Kerouac ( 1972) |
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The Town and the City by Jack Kerouac ( 1983)
Kerouac's first novel, compared in its day (1950) with the work of Thomas Wolfe, is about an ambitious but struggling writer, his family, and his small-town background.
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Trip Trap Haiku on the Road from Sf to Ny by Jack Kerouac, Lew Welch, Albert Saijo ( 1998)
Poetry. Letters. This newly-revised edition -- originally published in 1973 -- of the haiku Jack Kerouac, Albert Saijo, and Lew Welch jotted down on the road from San Francisco to New York in 1959, are dense, earthy incarnations of life on the road: "A coral colored Cadillac/in Texas/Threw gravel all over us, /our beat jeep/ -- Our windshield is nicked/but our eyes/ are/clear..." Albert recounts their November trip in Lew's Jeepster, making the big city scene, visiting Jacks home in Northport on Long Island, and the long drive back west. The book also includes letters to Kerouac from Lew Welch in Reno.
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Tristessa by Jack Kerouac ( 1992)
Presents the story of the self-destruction of a beautiful Aztec prostitute enmeshed in the drug underworld of Mexico City.
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Vanity of Duluoz An Adventurous Education, 1935-46 by Jack Kerouac ( 1994)
Originally subtitled "An Adventurous Education, 1935-1946", this book is a key volume in Kerouac's lifework, the series of autobiographical novels he referred to as The Legend of Duluoz. A wonderfully unassuming look back at the origins of his career--a prehistory of the Beat era, written from the perspective of the psychedelic '60s.
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Visions of Cody by Jack Kerouac ( 1993)
Written during 1951-52, this novel was an underground legend by the time it was finally published in 1972. Written in an experimental form, Kerouac created the ultimate account of his voyages with Neal Cassady, which he captured in a different form for On the Road.
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Visions of Gerard by Jack Kerouac ( 1991)
Another novel-as-autobiography, in which Jean Duluoz relates the story of his brother Gerard, who died as a nine-year-old when Jean was four.
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Visions of America by Jack Kerouac ( 1991) |
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On the Road by Jack Kerouac ( 1998)
Sal Paradise, a young writer, travels from New York to Los Angeles with his friend Dean Moriarty, and an assorted hodgepodge of women, bohemians, and others. Rich descriptions of characters, places and music show Kerouac's exuberance and his love of the freedom of the road. Revolutionary not only in subject matter but also in style, this book (written in 1950) launched the Beat movement and crowned Jack Kerouac its king. Autobiographical, as are most of Kerouac's books, ON THE ROAD involves characters who were Kerouac's real-life friends and Beat cohorts: Neal Cassady, Gregory Corso, Allan Ginsberg, William Burroughs (here appearing, as in Burroughs's own fiction, as the character Bill Lee). Publishing legend has it that Kerouac typed the manuscript frenziedly on large rolls of Teletype paper, not pausing for revision, and deposited these rolls on the desk of his startled editor.
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Wake Up A Life of the Buddha by Jack Kerouac ( 2009) |
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Wake Up A Life of the Buddha by Jack Kerouac ( 2008)
Published for the first time in book form, an account of the life of the Buddha by the author of
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Windblown World The Journals of Jack Kerouac 1947-1954 by Jack Kerouac ( 2006)
Excerpts and passages from the personal diaries of the great Beat writer chronicle a pivotal era in Kerouac's life, describing the creation of his first novel, The Town and City; his special friendships with Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs, and Neal Cassady; and his own take on the events described in On the Road. Reprint.
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You're a Genius All the Time Belief and Technique for Modern Prose by Jack Kerouac ( 2009)
In the 1950s, Allen Ginsberg asked his friend Jack Kerouac to write down his approach towards writing. Now collected for the first time YOU'RE A GENIUS ALL THE TIME includes Kerouac's thoughts not just on writing itself, but the state of mind and overall philosophy needed to be an artist.
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Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg The Letters by Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac ( 2010) |
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