What drew me in particular was the flirtation with the spiritual. I read The Dharma Bums, Jack Kerouac’s wild romp through American Zen Buddhism, and the great headlong rush of voice swept me along in its current I read without coming up for air. I was going to work my way through that wall someday, I thought.īy my senior year of high school, I was ready for the Beats. In our house, there was a wall of impressive hardcover books in the den, all the important works of the twentieth century displayed with the curated cool of a record collection: giant tomes like Freedom at Midnight and The Executioner’s Song, great novels like Portnoy’s Complaint and Gravity’s Rainbow and The Naked and the Dead, with glossy white jackets, seventies fonts, and enormous black-and-white photos of authors on the back covers. At thirteen, it had been The Great Gatsby and The Grapes of Wrath, then The Catcher in the Rye the year after that. Still from the 2012 film adaptation of On the Road.ĭad gave me a copy of On the Road for Christmas when I was sixteen.
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