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Loading... On the Road : The Original Scroll (2007)by Jack Kerouac
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. 2024 Advent, Day 6: I had actually already read this book in late October, but seeing as I ordered this calendar in September, that was bound to happen eventually. I had initially given the book 3 stars but on the reread (in paperback not ebook) I found the words a bit more lyrical and the prosecution more inspired. I am not sure if it's the medium or my general disposition on this particular day, but I did enjoy it. It is a book I would not hesitate to call one of the great American novels (but it still doesn't deserve 5 stars) ( ) I am unsure how to review Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road.” It is essential to read the introductions – three exist in my book. Without this pre-reading, the reader will get lost in the maze of Jack’s writing. The ‘stream of consciousness’ style adopted in the book is perfect because the trips, experiences, interactions, and inner dialogue appeared to flow seamlessly, with no dividing line between them. I do not believe this experience is a metaphor for life because most of us can divide our life stories into neat chapters. The book is based on actual experiences but largely fictionalizes them, making it impossible to figure out which aspects represent actual events and which are fiction. Therefore, readers must read the book and assume it portrays a mental journey as much as a physical trip. The physical trips are based on actual events, going from one place to another, with each trip segment taking place on the road, not rail, boat, or air. You may love the hedonistic lifestyle portrayed in the book, or it may disgust you. I do not believe Jack Kerouac cared for our opinion about this phase of his life. The experience is out there for you to read. “On the Road” is unusual for another reason: the book has no chapters or paragraphs, and the ideal way to read it is to set aside a day and read it in one sitting. I did not do this and often lost the thread of the tale. If you want to enjoy “On the Road,” set a day aside. I did not identify with the “Beat lifestyle” depicted in the tale. I often wondered about the pointlessness of the continuous flow from sexual experience to sexual experience, escapade to escapade, and from interaction to interaction. Jack Kerouac may have enjoyed those years, but I consider them pointless and directionless. I consider the book to be an expression of the ultimate self-indulgence. Over the years I've made several starts on [b:On The Road|841947|On The Road|Jack Kerouac|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1178825422l/841947._SY75_.jpg|1701188] but this is the first time I've finished it. This time I chose to read the scroll edition. At first, through a sense of obligation. It was a book I felt I should have read. But it was often cited in [b:Idiot Wind|46251478|Idiot Wind|Peter Kaldheim|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1560187553l/46251478._SY75_.jpg|71233035] by Peter Kaldheim which I'd just read, and I felt this obligation as a way of extending my understanding of the book and I was not disappointed. At the early stages, each time I picked it up (perhaps it was the text itself) I felt I should accelerate and skim a bit. Instead, I became absorbed and slowed down. I became more and more absorbed in its dimensions as the narrative progressed until I felt that once they had crossed the border into Mexico, the book became sublime. I had the sense that this was now a one-way journey out of country - out of time - out of youth. Yesterday a friend posted a collection of photos taken by today's generation who are jumping trains and sleeping rough across the USA. After Peter Kaldheim's story set in the 1970s. Seems that every 50 years a very similar story is being retold about the underbelly of of the USA and its inhabitants. Similar in some respects to Steinbeck's [b:Travels with Charlie in Search of America|33617956|Travels with Charlie in Search of America|John Steinbeck|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/book/50x75-a91bf249278a81aabab721ef782c4a74.png|1024827]. But none so artful and profound as On the Road. For me the really memorable parts are the descriptions of music and jazz players, being trapped in an all-night cinema, the Mexican brothel and the drive to Chicago. This is great literature. The structure fits the narrative and the landscape and its depths of imagery are so complex as to warrant further reading. Such a book certainly makes me wonder why Australia has no equivalent narrative: the journey around the centre and what that means for our national psyche. We stumbled down the road. Early morning traffic began, every car looking like a cruiser. Then we suddenly saw the cruiser coming and I knew it was the end of my life as I had known it and that it was entering a new and horrible stage of jails and iron sorrows, such as Egyptian Kings must know in the drowsy afternoon when the fight is up in the reeds of the mires. But the cruiser was our taxi and from that moment on we flew East and had to. (p.323) The road is long and winding, and so is Jack Kerouac’s writing, but it doesn’t make for a very enjoyable novel. As Truman Capote famously said, “None of these people have anything interesting to say,” he observed, “and none of them can write, not even Mr. Kerouac. [What they do] isn’t writing at all—it’s typing.” I understand what Kerouac is trying to do here: to represent life in the wandering way that life exists, and to present two characters that don’t know quite what they’re looking for and don’t find it. Does anything exemplify the post-WWII generation more? We’re still living with these consequences. Travel for the pure enjoyment of travel is good, even great. The intention of expanding yourself, and being with friends, and smelling the mountain and sea air, none of these are bad, but without any kind of connective tissue or narrative intention, it doesn’t make for a good book. Partially this may be due to this version being the “original scroll” that Kerouac wrote on a single long piece of paper over three weeks. It’s barely edited, uncensored, and ugly in form. I have to assume the book is helped by the presence of an editor, otherwise I fail to see how this captured the minds and hearts of photo-hippies of the 50s and true hippies of the following decades. The first part of the book, prior to the scroll, consists of introductions by scholars justifying this as a scholarly work. Much time is spent defending Kerouac's rampant racism and sexism - but why is it defended? Anyone who is not white is idolized in the book, yet they're idolized from a superiority point of view while neglecting the downsides of not being white in the 50s or before. Kerouac's tone-deafness leads him to imagine himself as an old Negro, without a care in the world. Sure. White women fare even worse - they're not at all idolized. Women in general are beings to be used sexually by men, and any female characters that appear have no personality (which isn't saying much, not many of Kerouac's characters do). Kerouac seeks humanity, yet fails to realize the enormity of humanity: he sees only the enormity of America. If you’re looking for a road or travel book, I’d recommend The Road by Cormac McCarthy, a fictional, depressing novel set in a nuked America where almost no living thing exists, but hope glimmers at the edges of the waste. For something more in line with On the Road, I much preferred John Steinbeck’s Travels With Charley. It’s funnier, more focused, and gives more of a feel for the United States than Kerouac ever even attempts. If you type enough some poetry will come out, and here are some lines I liked - - And there in the blue air I saw for the first time, in hints and mighty visitation, far off, the great snowy–tops of the Rocky Mountains. I took a deep breath. - ...air you can kiss… - I want to marry a girl so I can rest my soul with her till we both get old. - God exists without qualms. - ...she won't understand how much I love her---she's knitting my doom. - I stood poised on the great western plain and didn't know what to do. - Things are so hard to figure when you live from day to day in this feverish and silly world. - Women can forget what men can't. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to Publisher SeriesGallimard, Folio (5388)
Presents the previously unpublished original scroll edition of Jack Kerouac's novel "On the Road" which Kerouac wrote over a three-week period in 1951 on eight sheets of tracing paper that he taped together to form a 120-foot scroll. Includes the real names of the friends that inspired the book's storyline. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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