Are you THIS Author?
Click Here

Jack Kerouac

Jack Kerouac

Creakle(0)
Creakle

Jack Kerouac

Born on March 12, 1922, in Lowell, Massachusetts, Jack Kerouac's writing career began in the 1940s, but didn't meet with commercial success until 1957, when On the Road was published. The book became an American classic that defined the Beat Generation. Kerouac died on October 21, 1969, from an abdominal hemorrhage, at age 47.Early LifeFamed writer Jack Kerouac was born Jean-Louis Lebris de Kerouac on March 12, 1922, in Lowell, Massachusetts. A thriving mill town in the mid-19th century, Lowell had become, by the time of Jack Kerouac's birth, a down-and-out burg where unemployment and heavy drinking prevailed. Kerouac's parents, Leo and Gabrielle, were immigrants from Quebec, Canada; Kerouac learned to speak French at home before he learned English at school. Leo Kerouac owned his own print shop, Spotlight Print, in downtown Lowell, and Gabrielle Kerouac, known to her children as Memere, was a homemaker. Kerouac later described the family's home life: "My father comes home from his printing shop and undoes his tie and removes [his] 1920s vest, and sits himself down at hamburger and boiled potatoes and bread and butter, and with the kiddies and the good wife."Jack Kerouac endured a childhood tragedy in the summer of 1926, when his beloved older brother Gerard died of rheumatic fever at the age of 9. Drowning in grief, the Kerouac family embraced their Catholic faith more deeply. Kerouac's writing is full of vivid memories of attending church as a child: "From the open door of the church warm and golden light swarmed out on the snow. The sound of the organ and singing could be heard."Kerouac's two favorite childhood pastimes were reading and sports. He devoured all the 10-cent fiction magazines available at the local stores, and he also excelled at football, basketball and track. Although Kerouac dreamed of becoming a novelist and writing the "great American novel," it was sports, not writing, that Kerouac viewed as his ticket to a secure future. With the onset of the Great Depression, the Kerouac family suffered from financial difficulties, and Kerouac's father turned to alcohol and gambling to cope. His mother took a job at a local shoe factory to boost the family income, but, in 1936, the Merrimack River flooded its banks and destroyed Leo Kerouac's print shop, sending him into a spiral of worsening alcoholism and condemning the family to poverty. Kerouac, who was, by that time, a star running back on the Lowell High School football team, saw football as his ticket to a college scholarship, which in turn might allow him to secure a good job and save his family's finances.Upon graduating from high school in 1939, Kerouac received a football scholarship to Columbia University, but first he had to attend a year of preparatory school at the Horace Mann School for Boys in Brooklyn. So, at the age of 17, Kerouac packed his bags and moved to New York City, where he was immediately awed by the limitless new experiences of big city life. Of the many wonderful new things Kerouac discovered in New York, and perhaps the most influential on his life, was jazz. He described the feeling of walking past a jazz club in Harlem: "Outside, in the street, the sudden music which comes from the nitespot fills you with yearning for some intangible joy—and you feel that it can only be found within the smoky confines of the place." It was also during his year at Horace Mann that Kerouac first began writing seriously. He worked as a reporter for the Horace Mann Record, and published short stories in the school's literary magazine, the Horace Mann Quarterly.---------Jack Kerouac est né en 1922 à Lowell, dans le Massachusetts, et est considéré comme l’un des auteurs américains les plus importants du XXe siècle. Son œuvre la plus connue, Sur la route (On The Road, 1957), est l’un des romans fondateurs de ce que Kerouac nomma lui-même la Beat Generation, mouvement littéraire et culturel américain autour duquel se sont regroupés, n


Follow this Author Click here

Creakle


Born on March 12, 1922, in Lowell, Massachusetts, Jack Kerouac's writing career began in the 1940s, but didn't meet with commercial success until 1957, when On the Road was published. The book became an American classic that defined the Beat Generation. Kerouac died on October 21, 1969, from an abdominal hemorrhage, at age 47.Early LifeFamed writer Jack Kerouac was born Jean-Louis Lebris de Kerouac on March 12, 1922, in Lowell, Massachusetts. A thriving mill town in the mid-19th century, Lowell had become, by the time of Jack Kerouac's birth, a down-and-out burg where unemployment and heavy drinking prevailed. Kerouac's parents, Leo and Gabrielle, were immigrants from Quebec, Canada; Kerouac learned to speak French at home before he learned English at school. Leo Kerouac owned his own print shop, Spotlight Print, in downtown Lowell, and Gabrielle Kerouac, known to her children as Memere, was a homemaker. Kerouac later described the family's home life: "My father comes home from his printing shop and undoes his tie and removes [his] 1920s vest, and sits himself down at hamburger and boiled potatoes and bread and butter, and with the kiddies and the good wife."Jack Kerouac endured a childhood tragedy in the summer of 1926, when his beloved older brother Gerard died of rheumatic fever at the age of 9. Drowning in grief, the Kerouac family embraced their Catholic faith more deeply. Kerouac's writing is full of vivid memories of attending church as a child: "From the open door of the church warm and golden light swarmed out on the snow. The sound of the organ and singing could be heard."Kerouac's two favorite childhood pastimes were reading and sports. He devoured all the 10-cent fiction magazines available at the local stores, and he also excelled at football, basketball and track. Although Kerouac dreamed of becoming a novelist and writing the "great American novel," it was sports, not writing, that Kerouac viewed as his ticket to a secure future. With the onset of the Great Depression, the Kerouac family suffered from financial difficulties, and Kerouac's father turned to alcohol and gambling to cope. His mother took a job at a local shoe factory to boost the family income, but, in 1936, the Merrimack River flooded its banks and destroyed Leo Kerouac's print shop, sending him into a spiral of worsening alcoholism and condemning the family to poverty. Kerouac, who was, by that time, a star running back on the Lowell High School football team, saw football as his ticket to a college scholarship, which in turn might allow him to secure a good job and save his family's finances.Upon graduating from high school in 1939, Kerouac received a football scholarship to Columbia University, but first he had to attend a year of preparatory school at the Horace Mann School for Boys in Brooklyn. So, at the age of 17, Kerouac packed his bags and moved to New York City, where he was immediately awed by the limitless new experiences of big city life. Of the many wonderful new things Kerouac discovered in New York, and perhaps the most influential on his life, was jazz. He described the feeling of walking past a jazz club in Harlem: "Outside, in the street, the sudden music which comes from the nitespot fills you with yearning for some intangible joy—and you feel that it can only be found within the smoky confines of the place." It was also during his year at Horace Mann that Kerouac first began writing seriously. He worked as a reporter for the Horace Mann Record, and published short stories in the school's literary magazine, the Horace Mann Quarterly.---------Jack Kerouac est né en 1922 à Lowell, dans le Massachusetts, et est considéré comme l’un des auteurs américains les plus importants du XXe siècle. Son œuvre la plus connue, Sur la route (On The Road, 1957), est l’un des romans fondateurs de ce que Kerouac nomma lui-même la Beat Generation, mouvement littéraire et culturel américain autour duquel se sont regroupés, n


Author's Books
Creakle

On the Road

Jack Kerouac

Jack Kerouac's Beat characters, himself and Neil Cassady, tip...

Creakle

ON THE ROAD

On September 5, 1957, Jack Kerouac?s novel On The Road was published. Since...

Creakle

The Dharma Bums

Jack Kerouac

During the 1950s the search for Buddhist truths takes two young Bohemians...

Creakle

Big Sur

Jack Kerouac

Retiring to a seaside cabin near San Francisco, Jack Duluoz looks for...

Creakle

Subterraneans (Kerouac, Jack)

Jack Kerouac

Written over the course of three days and three nights, "The Subterraneans"...

Creakle

Desolation Angels

Jack Kerouac

After spending months as a fire lookout on a remote mountain, Jack Duluoz...

Creakle

Lonesome Traveler

Jack Kerouac

As he roams the US, Mexico, Morocco, Paris and London, Kerouac records...

Creakle

Tristessa

Jack Kerouac

Tristessa is the name with which Kerouac baptized Esperanza Villanueva, a...

Creakle

Atop an Underwood: Early Stories And Other Writings

Jack Kerouac

Before Jack Kerouac expressed the spirit of a generation in his 1957...

Creakle

Visions of Cody: Modern Classic

Jack Kerouac

This is a celebration of the life of Neal Cassady, the author's friend...

Creakle

Maggie Cassidy

Jack Kerouac

"When someone asks 'Where does [Kerouac] get that stuff?' say:...

Creakle

TheTown and the City by Kerouac, Jack ( Author ) ON Feb-03-2000, Paperback

Jack Kerouac

'It is the sum of myself, as far as the written word can go' -...

Creakle

Mexico city blues

Jack Kerouac

Le poète Jack Kerouac nous livre, en 242 chorus poétiques, de superbes...

Creakle

Pomes All Sizes (City Lights Pocket Poets Series)

Jack Kerouac

A collection of poems by beat generation author Jack Kerouac, written...

Creakle

Visions of Gerard

Jack Kerouac

"His life...ended when he was nine and the nuns of St. Louis de France...

Creakle

Doctor Sax (Kerouac, Jack)

Jack Kerouac

Jack Duluoz, a French-Canadian boy growing up in the factory town of...

Creakle

Scattered Poems (City Lights Pocket Poets Series)

Jack Kerouac

Spontaneous poetry by the author of On the Road, gathered from underground...

Creakle

Book of Haikus (Poets, Penguin)

Jack Kerouac

An anthology of more than five hundred haiku poems by one of the leaders of...

Creakle

Some of the Dharma

Jack Kerouac

Written during a critical period of his life, Some of the Dharma is a key...

Creakle

Satori in Paris / Pic (Kerouac, Jack)

Jack Kerouac

Paperback. Pub the Date: January. 1994 Pages: 238 in Publisher: Grove Press...

Creakle

Vanity of Duluoz: An Adventurous Education, 1935-46

Jack Kerouac

Originally subtitled "An Adventurous Education, 1935-1946," Vanity of...

Creakle

Book of Blues (Penguin Poets)

Jack Kerouac

Best known for his "Legend of Duluoz" novels, including On the Road and The...

Creakle

Satori in Paris: Modern Classic (Flamingo Modern Classics)

Jack Kerouac

The story of Kerouac's visit to Paris and Brittany in search of his...

Creakle

The Portable Jack Kerouac (Viking Portable Library)

Ann Charters

This one-volume omnibus, planned by the author before his death and now...

Creakle

Book of Dreams

Jack Kerouac

Book of Dreams The definitive, unabridged edition of Jack Kerouac's...

Creakle

Wake Up: A Life of the Buddha

Jack Kerouac

Published for the first time in book form, an account of the life of the...

Creakle

Selected Letters: 1940-1956: 1940-56

Jack Kerouac

The life and craft of Jack Kerouac are traced through some of his most...

Creakle

Scripture of the Golden Eternity (City Lights Pocket Poets Series)

Jack Kerouac

These classic Kerouac meditations, zen koans, and prose poems express the...

Creakle

Door Wide Open

Jack Kerouac

A collection of poignant love letters between Jack Kerouac and Joyce...


Member RatingsAdd yours - Click here
No Member ratings so far

Be the FIRST to rate this Author!