- The Town and the City
infobox Book |
name = The Town and the City
title_orig =
translator =
image_caption = "The Town and the City". Harvest hardcover edition, second printing, 1970.
author =Jack Kerouac
cover_artist =
country =United States
language = English
series =
genre = Semi-autobiographical novel
publisher =Harcourt Brace
release_date = 1950
media_type = Print (Hardback &Paperback )
pages = Approx. 512 pages
isbn = ISBN 0-15-690790-9* (*For reprint edition- there is no ISBNs for a 1950 edition).
preceded_by =
followed_by =On the Road (1957)"The Town and the City" is a novel by
Jack Kerouac , published byHarcourt Brace in 1950. This was the first major work published by Kerouac, who later became famous for his second novel "On the Road " (1957). Like all of Jack Kerouac's major works, "The Town and the City" is essentially an autobiographical novel, though less directly so than most of his other works. "The Town and the City" was written in a conventional manner over a period of years, and much more novelistic license was taken with this work than after Kerouac's adoption of quickly written "spontaneous prose". "The Town and the City" was written before Kerouac had developed his own style, and it is heavily influenced byThomas Wolfe (even down to the title, reminiscent of Wolfe titles such as "The Web and the Rock").The novel is focused on two locations (as suggested by the title): one, the early
Beat Generation circle of New York in the late 1940s, the other, the nearly rural small town of Galloway, Massachusetts that the main character comes from, before going off to college on a football scholarship. The experiences of the young "Peter Martin" struggling for success on the high school football team are largely those of Jack Kerouac (he returns to the subject again in his last work "Vanity of Duluoz ", published in 1968).The "city" represents a number of figures of the early beat circle:
Allen Ginsberg (as Leon Levinsky),Lucien Carr (as Kenneth Wood),William Burroughs (as Will Dennison),Herbert Huncke (as Junky),David Kammerer (as Waldo Meister),Edie Parker (as Judie Smith) and alsoJoan Vollmer (as Mary Dennison) -- though she essentially has a non-speaking role (however some of her ideas are quoted by the Ginsberg-figure). Near the end of the novel, the Waldo Meister character dies by falling from the window of Kenneth Wood's apartment (a distant echo of the real event: David Kammerer knifed by Lucien Carr, possibly in self-defense). In the novel the police largely just accept this as a suicide. A version of the events closer to the truth can be found in "Vanity of Duluoz", where Carr was arrested and eventually accepted a plea of manslaughter and a prison sentence; and Kerouac was arrested and held briefly as an accessory after the fact.
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