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"Lonesome Traveller" by Jack Kerouac (1959) is a semi-autobiographical short-story/travelogue collection that recounts the author's experiences on the road/sea/rail in the 1950s. Its serves as a great introduction to Keroauc with its 200 pages organised into sections far easier to digest than 'On The Road', although often more challenging if you are not open to his unique style.
In Keroauc's words; “..a collection of published and unpublished pieces connected together because they have a common theme: Traveling.” and “Its scope and purpose is simply poetry, or, natural description.”
There are 8-sections (I wont call them chapters) which follow the 'spontaneous prose' format covering snapshots of his travel through the United States, Mexico, North Africa, France and the United Kingdom. Usually taken from his journals, some content is covered elsewhere in his other books, the fire lookout and his trip to Europe specifically, but are no less interesting for it. Indeed, it offers a very unique look at his writing process from experience, recording and recounting.
Perhaps what comes through most strongly in the book is the sense of Keroauc as solitary figure (clues in the title). When contrasted against the more famous On The Road, Dharma Bums or Desolation Angels you can see the different sides of Keroauc; one the chronicler of crazy adventures in the company of his Beat friends, and the one portrayed here as independent, wandering seeker of himself. It has to be said that this is a maturing Keroauc by this point, published in 1960 he was dealing with pressure and a weight of expectation, his descent into cynicism and frustration occasionally comes across in tone in the later sections, if not the actual retelling of the experiences themselves.
Definitely worth reading for its insights into his experiences and the personal 'postcards' of the places he travels to. Caution advised for some of the language; its of its time. But if you don't enjoy a section, just skip ahead... he would have.
'All that hitchikin All that railroadin All that comin back to America'
4/5
I spent some formative time in the 90s living in San Fran, hanging out in North Beach, going to coffee and readings at City Lights Books.
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Amazing…
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I have visited a few times over the years. I know the city is supposedly a disaster now, but it was a special place in the mid to late 20th century. I drove north through Washington to Vancouver, Canada in the 1980s. The cascades are beautiful.
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Cascades are fantastic! Spiritual in every sense. I have slept on Lassen and Shasta.
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That is incredible.
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And the City currently breaks my heart, but she'll be back. She was pretty horrid in the late 80s, early 90s before dotcom and biomedical times.
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I don’t hear much positive news coming out yet. Have to hope.
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City transformations take 12 years or so, although tech is speeding everything up.
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And take a change of political direction to last that long I guess. I really hope things improve.
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You got it
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change of political direction in SF is a pipedream
keep smoking that pipe
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not if the homeless population continues to grow
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🤣 Show me a city where homelessness is not growing.
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San Fran is third world and isn't coming back
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74 sats \ 1 reply \ @Athena 18 May
I love to read travelling memoirs. There's a great Indian writer who wrote about travelling a lot. I read his stories in English and they are so same as I see this one. These are interesting as they seem.
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Jack didn't know how to drive so his mother drove him
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I have never read this, though I may have come across passages elsewhere. Regarding the fire tower, I just watched this recently: https://youtu.be/_wpEvDW_-0c?si=JeOqlwvTaEel9eNF
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Thank you for sharing - that film is perfect. Bucket list item for me to visit.
I suppose that whilst On The Road was made in America, Keroauc was made on Desolation Peak.
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Jack Kerouac didn't drive. He didn't know how to drive. His mother had to drive him
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13 sats \ 1 reply \ @siggy47 18 Jul
Memere?
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Neal Casady
I thought it was his mother
I did some research
You're correct that Jack Kerouac did not drive during the cross-country trips that inspired "On the Road." Here are the key points about Kerouac and driving:
  1. Kerouac did not have a driver's license during the travels depicted in "On the Road"[1][3].
  2. Neal Cassady (the inspiration for the character Dean Moriarty) did most of the cross-country driving[1][3].
  3. Although much of the novel focuses on driving and road trips, Kerouac himself was primarily a passenger rather than the driver[1][3].
  4. Kerouac learned to drive later in life, but not during the period covered in "On the Road"[3].
  5. The car and driving are central themes in "On the Road," but they represent more than just transportation. The car serves as a male space and a symbol of freedom and movement in the novel[4].
  6. Despite not driving himself, Kerouac was able to capture the essence of the road trip experience and the changing landscape of America's highways in the late 1940s and early 1950s[4].
This disconnect between Kerouac's personal experience and the novel's focus on driving highlights his skill as a writer in capturing and conveying experiences he observed rather than directly participated in.
Sources [1] ABOUT – Jack Kerouac https://jackkerouac.com/pages/about [2] Jack Kerouac Didn't Ride Motorcycles, But We Went to His Open ... https://motorcycledays.com/2020/10/28/kerouac-didnt-ride-motorcycles-but-we-went-to-his-open-house-anyway/ [3] Jack Kerouac - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Kerouac [4] JACK KEROUAC AND ON THE ROAD - Austin Kleon https://austinkleon.com/2007/10/02/jack-kerouac-and-on-the-road/ [5] Jack Kerouac was a seriously flawed person who shouldn't be ... https://www.reddit.com/r/books/comments/v6sci1/jack_kerouac_was_a_seriously_flawed_person_who/
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So nice to read you while sipping my coffee.
I wonder why you didn’t give it full marks?
Pls keep posting
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Jack didn't drive. His mother drove.
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Ouch. I don’t drive either. My wife does
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I made a mistake. His friend drove not his mother
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Charlatan
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Jack didn't drive on his road trips. His mother drove him.
What a cool beatnik
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