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The Unknown Kerouac: Rare, Unpublished & Newly Translated Writings
Hardback

The Unknown Kerouac: Rare, Unpublished & Newly Translated Writings

$98.99
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A major literary event- a stunning collection of long lost, never-before-published, and newly translated writings by the legendary author of On the Road.

A major literary event- a stunning collection of long lost, never-before-published, and newly translated writings by the legendary author of On the Road.
I am French-Canadian, put into the world in New England. When I am mad, I often swear in French. When I dream, I often dream in French. When I cry I always cry in French. The Library of America continues its acclaimed Kerouac edition with this remarkable gathering of previously unpublished writings, including two novellas originally written in the French-Canadian dialect journal. This unprecedented collection offers intimate glimpses of the growth of Kerouac’s mind and art, revealing him, for the first time, to have been essentially an immigrant writer, one whose extraordinary style emerged as a fusion his native and adopted languages. It opens with a series of early essays on Frank Sinatra and bebop that reveal Kerouac to have an acute observer of the postwar cultural scene. The newly translated novellas The Night Is My Woman (La Nuit est ma femme), from 1957-the last work he wrote before composing the On the Road scroll-and Old Bull in the Bowery (Sur le chemin)-an alternate version of On the Road written in five days in Mexico-provide missing links in Kerouac’s path to a wholly new style of storytelling. Also included is the pivotal 1951 journal in which Kerouac experiences the breakthrough that leads him to write On the Road, the late reflective works Memory Babe and Beat Spotlight, which offer detailed portraits of his youth and his struggle with fame; and a penetrating interview with his friend and fellow Beat John Clellon Holmes.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
The Library of America
Country
United States
Date
27 September 2016
Pages
500
ISBN
9781598534986

A major literary event- a stunning collection of long lost, never-before-published, and newly translated writings by the legendary author of On the Road.

A major literary event- a stunning collection of long lost, never-before-published, and newly translated writings by the legendary author of On the Road.
I am French-Canadian, put into the world in New England. When I am mad, I often swear in French. When I dream, I often dream in French. When I cry I always cry in French. The Library of America continues its acclaimed Kerouac edition with this remarkable gathering of previously unpublished writings, including two novellas originally written in the French-Canadian dialect journal. This unprecedented collection offers intimate glimpses of the growth of Kerouac’s mind and art, revealing him, for the first time, to have been essentially an immigrant writer, one whose extraordinary style emerged as a fusion his native and adopted languages. It opens with a series of early essays on Frank Sinatra and bebop that reveal Kerouac to have an acute observer of the postwar cultural scene. The newly translated novellas The Night Is My Woman (La Nuit est ma femme), from 1957-the last work he wrote before composing the On the Road scroll-and Old Bull in the Bowery (Sur le chemin)-an alternate version of On the Road written in five days in Mexico-provide missing links in Kerouac’s path to a wholly new style of storytelling. Also included is the pivotal 1951 journal in which Kerouac experiences the breakthrough that leads him to write On the Road, the late reflective works Memory Babe and Beat Spotlight, which offer detailed portraits of his youth and his struggle with fame; and a penetrating interview with his friend and fellow Beat John Clellon Holmes.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
The Library of America
Country
United States
Date
27 September 2016
Pages
500
ISBN
9781598534986