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Conventional fiction

 Subject
Subject Source: Sackner Database

Found in 9 Collections and/or Records:

Beatific Soul / Kerouac, Jack., 2007

 Item
Identifier: CC-47280-50023
Scope and Contents

This outstanding exhibition of Kerouac's life and work was seen by the Sackners. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 2007

On The Road: 50th Anniversary Edition / Kerouac, Jack., 2007

 Item
Identifier: CC-47117-49856
Scope and Contents Amazon.com: "Few novels have had as profound an impact on American culture as On the Road. Pulsating with the rhythms of 1950s underground America, jazz, sex, illicit drugs, and the mystery and promise of the open road, Kerouac's classic novel of freedom and longing defined what it meant to be "beat" and has inspired generations of writers, musicians, artists, poets, and seekers who cite their discovery of the book as the event that "set them free." Based on Kerouac's adventures with Neal Cassady, On the Road tells the story of two friends whose four cross-country road trips are a quest for meaning and true experience. Written with a mixture of sad-eyed naïvete and wild abandon, and imbued with Kerouac's love of America, his compassion for humanity, and his sense of language as jazz, On the Road is the quintessential American vision of freedom and hope, a book that changed American literature and changed anyone who has ever picked it up. This hardcover edition commemorates the...
Dates: 2007

On The Road: The Original Scroll / Kerouac, Jack., 2007

 Item
Identifier: CC-47116-49855
Scope and Contents Amazon.com: Though Jack Kerouac began thinking about the novel that was to become On the Road as early as 1947, it was not until three weeks in April 1951, in an apartment on West Twentieth Street in Manhattan, that he wrote the first full draft that was satisfactory to him. Typed out as one long, single-spaced paragraph on eight long sheets of tracing paper that he later taped together to form a 120-foot scroll, this document is among the most significant, celebrated, and provocative artifacts in contemporary American literary history. It represents the first full expression of Kerouac's revolutionary aesthetic, the identifiable point at which his thematic vision and narrative voice came together in a sustained burst of creative energy. It was also part of a wider vital experimentation in the American literary, musical, and visual arts in the post-World War II period. It was not until more than six years later, and several new drafts, that Viking published, in 1957, the novel...
Dates: 2007