Book Review
Jack Kerouac: The Road Novels:
1957-1960, Jack Kerouac, Library Of America, 2007
…yah, 2007, fifty years after the
mad max scrolled out publication of Ti Jean’s great autobiographical American West
adventure, On
The Road , complete with golden
all-american west cowboy (okay, maybe not cowboy in occupational sense, but in
the yearning for wide open spaces, for the self-reliance, for the non-conformity,
for the lessons learned in jail, for the wild boy Saturday night let god count
up the survivors Sunday morning, and, yes, for the con man, big hat braggadocio,
and lonesome constant bewildered chatter to keep his inner demons away) bonded soul
mate, for a while anyway, until the next best thing came along as it turned out,
we get a bonanza, a plethora, an immense big
old volume of his road novels. And so once again we get to read all in
one spot the zigzag cross continental comings and goings of Sal and Dean (and a
cast of characters this age, this new age, has been unable to match). The
struggle to break out of that encroaching red scare cold war night and its conformities,
the jail break-out of those who suffered
through the 1930s and the war and yearned to have a little space for themselves
in this wicked old world. Some of the stuff, in retrospect, may have been
merely silly, some of it frankly weird, and some of it only possible as we of
the next generation learned only under a heavy drug veil but with at least two,
if not more, major all-american literary talents that helped define the times
through the be-bop beat movement that silliness, that weirdness, that heavy drug
veil was a small price to pay for endless nights of reading and re-reading the book,
the poems and the journals.
Add to that the Dharma Bums spiritual quest, fairly unsuccessful for Jack in the end as he
vanished to his mother’s porch, vanished from the road anyway where he made his
literary dough, but providing a good section on that famous Howl night when the adventurous bad boys of American literature threw down
the gauntlet (rather than like Mailer, Jones, and Styron chase that great
American novel idea to impress the New York, no, the Manhattan literary crowd)
and said take that moloch America. Then a small novella, The Subterraneans, about tough love, tough interracial love, although really about
being able to love and write that second million word. No go. Sorry Jack. And
finish up with the beatest work, Tristessa, about the fellahin
world, Mexican section, and the struggle to face the day under the spell of Mister
Jones, this side of Nelson Algren’s Man With A Golden Arm, some “travelogue’ essays (including one of the best tributes to the
long gone daddy hoboes from a non-hobo around) and journal entries to thrill the
academics. Yes, a book cheap at any price. And get this-fifty years later the
works still makes one, or should make one, want to reach for the car keys and
go, leaving maybe just an e-mail address behind.
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