How Are You Going To Save Yourself
- 400 páginas
- 14 horas de lectura
An arresting debut about being young, black and male in today's America.
John Clellon Holmes se destacó como cronista y analista del espíritu y estilo de vida de la Generación Beat. Su obra, profundamente informada por sus amistades dentro del movimiento, profundiza en temas de divergencia social y la búsqueda de la iluminación espiritual. La prosa de Holmes se caracteriza por su naturaleza observacional y reflexiva, ofreciendo a los lectores una profunda visión de la vida interior de sus personajes. Capturó magistralmente el espíritu de una época, explorando la rebelión contra la convención y la búsqueda de la autenticidad en la América de posguerra.







An arresting debut about being young, black and male in today's America.
Pořídit si domů štěně znamená velkou zodpovědnost. Vždyť pejsek na Vás bude závislý po celý svůj život. Za každodenní péči se Vám však odmění oddaností, věrností a přítulností. Vše, co byste měli vědět o výchově štěněte, než si je pořídíte, najdete v této ilustrované příručce.
The first great "Beat Generation" novel takes readers in the heart of bohemian post-war New York City in search of the origins of this literary movement, which included such innovators as Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and Neil Cassady. Reprint.
John Clellon Holmes reflects on the history of jazz in this classic novel. Edgar Pool is "The Horn," the hero, and the man who helps change the face of American music. He becomes the legend whose triumphant and tragic career is reconstructed through the memories of his friends and lovers.
Here, in what has become a classic of its kind since its publication in 1978, is the fascinating story of Jack Kerouac, "King of the Beats" and American literary legend, recorded through the voices of his friends and lovers. Authors Barry Gifford and Lawrence Lee retraced Kerouac's life at home and on the road and talked with the prophets, musicians, poets, socialites, and working people who knew Jack Kerouac. Some are famous like Allen Ginsberg, Gore Vidal, William Burroughs, Gary Snyder, among others; and some are not like Jack's boyhood buddies, his lovers, and his barroom companions. All, however, have contributed to a remarkably vibrant, riveting portrait of a life. We see Jack at Columbia University and on the scene of Greenwich Village; speeding across the tarmac of America with Neal Cassidy ("Dan Moriarty" in Kerouac's classic novel, On the Road); at home with his possessive mother; in California, drinking wine and talking Buddhism; and finally, in Florida, where his life ends tragically at forty-seven years old. Jack's Book, like Kerouac's novels, makes a unique contribution to our understanding of a man and a generation that shaped the dreams and visions of those who followed.