Baby Driver: A Story About Myself

by Jan Kerouac

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"The first novel by Jan Kerouac, daughter of Jack--a thrilling work of autobiographical fiction that hops from Mexico to Manhattan, Sante Fe to South America, describing with inspired detail a life colored by drugs, abandonment, loss, far-flung travel, occasional danger, and like her father, a relentless quest for pure experience. "Was it January or February? The coconut fronds waving, shining like green hair in the sun, gave no clue." Fifteen-year-old Jan is pregnant, gamely living off rice show more and whatever fish her boyfriend John can catch in Yelapa, Mexico. She and John, who introduced her to Beckett, Kafka, Joyce, and Dostoevsky, are writing a novel together. Before she can leave for Guadalajara where she plans to deliver her baby, she goes into labor three months early, and the baby is stillborn. She turns sixteen soon after and decides to head north."-- Provided by publisher. show less

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stephmo Both books show women that became so much collateral damage in the wake of the living myth of the Beats.

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4 reviews
One would expect that as the only child of Jack Kerouac, Jan Kerouac would have been afforded something of note or merit. Instead, not only did she receive the slap of never being officially recognized by her father, her story reveals a mother that largely spent her life chasing down one bad relationship after another resulting in an additional three children in an already rough situation. When a bout with prostitution is a step-up because it represents stability and structure, you know that the memoir is going to be dim on positive moments.

Her father manages only two in-person appearances and one via phone - both in-person ones drenched in liquor. And yet, it becomes apparent that the name will haunt her for better or for worse. show more During a stint in a mental hospital, a doctor thrusts a copy of On the Road at her with seemingly no regard for her welfare because he's an immense fan. Her mother leverages the name to track her down as a runaway since it is quite obvious that their situation would not otherwise afford a front-page news story. In the expanded edition, letters to her publisher reveal that she's been asked to come up with more stories about her father...something she's unable to do beyond their 3 encounters.

Jan structures her book so that chapters alternate between an older version of Jan and a little-girl until the little girl catches up with the older-version we first met in Chapter 1. This structure gives us insight into the adult's decisions all along the way while making everything that happens to the little girl all the more tragic as it is clear that these adventures will have long-term consequence.
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I have to admit, I first checked this book out of my local library without expecting to like it. Being a tremendous fan of Jack Kerouac, I really just wanted to read Baby Driver out of curiosity. I was pleasantly surprised to find out that the family literary gene successfully made its way to Jan Kerouac. This book is excellent; her writing style is fluid and highly commendable. It's not hard reading, but that isn't to say that there isn't plenty here to ponder. I would certainly recommend this book to anyone, and not just those who are interested in Kerouac Sr. For women especially, this book is well-worth reading.
Picked this up at a book rescue. Looked at the title and thought it was the book the recent movie was based on. I was wrong. Instead, this is a memoir of Jan Kerouac, daughter of Jack. Besides the genetics, he had nothing to do with her upbringing. She was raised with a single mother and had a rough childhood. She made many bad decisions like so many of us do. I really wasn't that interested in the book but did finish it.
What a tragic life - anyone interested in human psychology will get a wild ride with this one. One can only guess what a different life she would have led if Jack was more involved in her life.

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Baby Driver: A Story About Myself
Original title
Baby driver
People/Characters
Jan Kerouac; Joan Haverty Kerouac; John; Katy Olly; Susan Olly; David Bowers (show all 21); Don Olly; Hilary; Jack Kerouac; Dierdre; Coral; Maggie; Paul; Ganders; Lydia; Miguel; Nina; Tito; Charlotte; Allen Ginsberg; Marta
Important places
Mexico; San Francisco, California, USA (Haight-Ashbury); New York, New York, USA; Columbia, Missouri, USA; Trenton, Missouri, USA; Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA (show all 9); San José, Costa Rica; Lima, Peru; Ellensburg, Washington, USA
Important events
Assassination of John F. Kennedy
Epigraph
They call me Baby Driver

And once upon a pair of wheels

Hit the road and I'm gone ah

What's my number

I wonder how your engine feels

Ba ba ba ba

Scoot down the road

What's m... (show all)y number

I wonder how your engine feels.


© 1969 Paul Simon

Used by permission
Dedication
To my brother and mother

Dearest Peggy Bull,

Wherever you are please come back and bring

our dreams to life again.
First words
Was it January or February?
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)The only answers were the hissing and crackling of coals in the wood stove by my head, and the intermittent pops in the walls as the home cooled down for the night.
Blurbers
Ferlinghetti, Lawrence; See, Carolyn

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Biography & Memoir
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3561 .E628 .B3Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
184
Popularity
178,081
Reviews
4
Rating
½ (3.45)
Languages
7 — Czech, Dutch, English, French, German, Hungarian, Spanish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
13
ASINs
4