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Loading... On the Road: The Original Scroll (Penguin Modern Classics)by Jack Kerouac
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. “Yes!” yelled Neal. “Yes! Dig him! Now consider his soul---stop awhile and consider.” I have never read the originally published On the Road, so cannot compare and contrast to this Original Scroll version. Here the characters are not minimally veiled with name changes, rather they are who they are. The language propels the journey forward at breakneck speed - multiple journeys across the country in search of IT. Perhaps it is my age at the first introduction to the stories recounted, but I do not find Neal Cassady particularly charming, stimulating, or fascinating - and wonder what spell he cast over Kerouac and others. It became abundantly clear that I would not have fit in well with the Beat Generation crowd. Yet, in the end, there were a variety of passages that proved powerful in terms of how to approach and react to life's journey and the less than straight path taken along the way. It felt, at times, like Waiting for Godot on speed and with a good dose of sex and jazz thrown in. In the end, it provides insight into the all-too-real search each of us has for meaning, for happiness, for IT. Despite all the partying and shouts of joy along the road, it seems a sad book that reflects a less than successful journey - but perhaps with some hope for a better journey moving forward. I am glad I read it, but will not rush out to buy the initial 1957 publicly available version of On the Road. Very interesting, it allows the reader to see exactly what Kerouac was saying before he had to edit himself for the sake of a constipated american populace of the 50's. No real surprises as to the characters, all were well known before. I did reread the published version immediately prior to reading this however. I must say that having read and read this in the space of a month, it certainly has lost some of it's romance. Maybe I'm just getting older, but I certainly don't see Jack and Neil as I used to. Maybe it's Neil I don't see the same way anymore. Maybe I finally realize that at the end of the book, Jack didn't either. Kerouac may have tried to turn the page at the end of the story, but we do know that in real life, by even the early 60's he had succumbed to his own fears, and turned from his Buddhist / Zen explorations back into the depressed gloom that is Catholicism. This is what eventually killed him long before the booze. read 50 pages, decided not to finish 0.030 seconds to build listing
Amazon.com (ISBN 067006355X, Hardcover)The legendary 1951 scroll draft of On the Road, published word for word as Kerouac originally composed itThough Jack Kerouac began thinking about the novel that was to become On the Road as early as 1947, it was not until three weeks in April 1951, in an apartment on West Twentieth Street in Manhattan, that he wrote the first full draft that was satisfactory to him. Typed out as one long, single-spaced paragraph on eight long sheets of tracing paper that he later taped together to form a 120-foot scroll, this document is among the most significant, celebrated, and provocative artifacts in contemporary American literary history. It represents the first full expression of Kerouac's revolutionary aesthetic, the identifiable point at which his thematic vision and narrative voice came together in a sustained burst of creative energy. It was also part of a wider vital experimentation in the American literary, musical, and visual arts in the post-World War II period. It was not until more than six years later, and several new drafts, that Viking published, in 1957, the novel known to us today. On the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of On the Road, Viking will publish the 1951 scroll in a standard book format. The differences between the two versions are principally ones of significant detail and altered emphasis. The scroll is slightly longer and has a heightened linguistic virtuosity and a more sexually frenetic tone. It also uses the real names of Kerouac's friends instead of the fictional names he later invented for them. The transcription of the scroll was done by Howard Cunnell who, along with Joshua Kupetz, George Mouratidis, and Penny Vlagopoulos, provides a critical introduction that explains the fascinating compositional and publication history of On the Road and anchors the text in its historical, political, and social context. Celebrating 50 Years of On the Road
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