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Kerouac's Crooked Road

Kerouac's Crooked Road

The Development of a Fiction

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Tim Hunt

$36.00

Paperback (Other formats: E-book)
978-0-8093-2970-0
308 pages, 5.5 x 8.25
04/06/2010

 

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About the Book

Now a classic, Kerouac’s Crooked Road was one of the first critical works on the legendary Beat writer to analyze his work as serious literary art, placing it in the broader American literary tradition with canonical writers like Herman Melville and Mark Twain. Author Tim Hunt explores Kerouac’s creative process and puts his work in conversation with classic American literature and with critical theory.

            This edition includes a new preface by the author, which takes a discerning look at the implications of the 2007 publication of the original typewriter scroll version of On the Road for the understanding of Kerouac and his novel. Although some critics see the scroll version of the novel as embodying Kerouac’s true artistic vision and the 1957 Viking edition as a commercialized compromise of that vision, Hunt argues that the two versions should not be viewed as antithetical but rather as discrete perspectives of a writer deeply immersed in writing as both performance and evolving process.

Hunt moves beyond the mythos surrounding the “spontaneous creation” of On the Road, which upholds Kerouac’s reputation as a cultural icon, to look more closely at an innovative writer who wanted to bridge the gap between the luscious, talk-filled world of real life and the sterilized version of that world circumscribed by overly intellectualized, literary texts, through the use of written language driven by effusive passion rather than sober reflection. With close, erudite readings of Kerouac’s major and minor works, from On the Road to Visions of Cody,Hunt draws on Kerouac’s letters, novels, poetry, and experimental drafts to position Kerouac in both historical and literary contexts, emphasizing the influence of writers such as Emerson, Melville, Wolfe, and Hemingway on his provocative work.

Authors/Editors

Tim Hunt is a professor of English at Illinois State University.

Reviews

Praise for previous editions:

“This is the best and most ambitious piece of analytic criticism yet written about Kerouac.”

—George Dardess, Moody Street Irregulars

“[Hunt] demonstrates that Kerouac’s fiction, unlike the commonly accepted notion of it as the work of a talented but undisciplined writer, is the result of labor and thought . . . [and] gives as lucid an explanation as I have seen of Kerouac’s ‘spontaneous prose’ and ‘sketching,’ relating both of these to jazz and painting.”—The Review of Contemporary Fiction

“This is an enormously stimulating and rewarding study of a writer who may have been too quickly undervalued.”—Warren French, Studies in American Fiction

“This is decidedly the best of the American books on Kerouac—smart, insightful, situating Kerouac firmly in the broader American tradition while remaining wonderfully alert to the themes and formal strategies that mark Kerouac’s own highly innovative contribution to that tradition.”—Ann Douglas, author of Terrible Honesty: Mongrel Manhattan in the 1920s