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Atop An Underwood
 
 

Atop An Underwood (Paperback)

by Paul Marion (Foreword, Editor), Jack Kerouac (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
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Jack Kerouac's buddy William Burroughs once told an interviewer that Jack had written about a million words by the time he turned 22, and poet and editor Paul Marion publishes 80,000 of them for the first time in Atop an Underwood: jazz reviews written in high school, several rushing headlong poems, short stories (Kerouac dashed off some 200 during his 1941 stint working in a Hartford gas station), essays, radio plays, self-exhortations, an excerpt from the novel The Sea Is My Brother. Marion takes what he calls a "documentary approach," grouping together pieces by period, subject, circumstance of composition. And what emerges from the whole is a terrifically fresh, vivid, and engaging portrait of the Beat artist as a young man.

Kerouac, even in his teens, was riffing on his big themes--the restless quest for meaning along "the marathon alleys of life"; the lonely majesty of "the real, true, America, America in the night"; the fleeting pleasures of love, sex, comradeship, food, and drink; the compulsion to set down his experiences in swift, fluid prose. There are no buried masterpieces or stunning revelations here, but every piece hums with the spontaneity and immediacy of Kerouac's voice. Reading these youthful jottings is like hanging out at one of those all-night bull sessions when Kerouac and his pals "talked about eternity and infinity and the government and Reds and women and things..."

"I will write a play about life as life is and I will wait till it hits me in the face before I write it," he proclaimed when he was 18. "Then I will rush to my typewriter and write it. So hold on to your seats. It will soon come and I feel terrifically exuberated right just now." Atop an Underwood is a record of the many forms that exuberation took during the years when life first started to hit Kerouac in the face. --David Laskin --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



From Publishers Weekly

"I am part of the American temper, the American temperament, the American tempo," writes a teenage Kerouac in a prophetic 1941 prose fragment, one of the 60 such pieces in this collection of Kerouac's juvenilia. These fugitive pieces, previously unpublished, provide a tantalizing glimpse of the future Beat generation originator, spanning Kerouac's adolescence and his first years in New York. The themes here would later find expression in On the Road and the Duluoz series: his French-American heritage, with its idiosyncratic English; his mystical identification with America; and, taking cues from Whitman, his vision of art as a means to unfold the authenticity of the self. The best pieces are the short sketches written in Hartford in 1941. Kerouac crafts, diary-style, a catalogue of daily activities (working in a cookie factory, living in a cheap apartment) while experimenting with the rhythms and forms he derived from his reading of Thomas Wolfe and William Saroyan. In the early '40s, Kerouac lived in several diverse social spheres. He worked in Hartford, attended Columbia University on a football scholarship, was kicked out of Columbia, enlisted in the Merchant Marines and simply bummed around. It is evident that radio had an overlooked influence on Kerouac's style. A piece like "Howdy," which begins, "Howdy. This is Jack Kerouac, speaking to you," obviously takes its formal cues from radio broadcasts. The last section of the book is less interesting, excerpting a section of a novel Kerouac wrote about the Merchant Marines. Although this book shouldn't be a starting place for new Kerouac readers, there is enough real Kerouac bebop here to interest even his more casual fans. (Nov.) FYI: The publication of this collection will coincide with the publication of the second volume of Kerouac's selected letters.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Potrait - as a young man..., Nov 18 2003
By "summitaih" (Michigan) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Atop An Underwood (Hardcover)
My review is a combination of previous reviews. A lot of these writings are pretty rough, and you could probably find stories of comparable quality in your local college publications ("Where can I find my soul? / In solitude said my friend, in solitude. / Yes. I have found my soul in solitude"). But there are some oustanding pieces, and some great turns of phrase, that separate Kerouac from all other writers his age. He is uninhibited here, which sporatically gives the readers glimpses of the brilliance to come. One of my favorite poems here is "America in the Night" (this reads like a great beat work):

"Red, white and blue they say? / America? / Don't kid me, I say to they: - / American is blue / Right through- / Blue! / Improvise, black saxist, improvise! / Tell them with your black soul / That America is blue, / That America is the blues."

I'd give it 3.5 stars - if that were allowed.

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2.0 out of 5 stars Table Scraps, Feb 28 2002
By B. M. White (Eastlake, oh United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I like Kerouac and I thought it would be interesting to read a book of his early attempts at writing, but this book turned out to be a heap of garbage that would never have gotten published if there wasn't a famous name and picture on the cover. Even Kerouac himself said this stuff wasn't worth reading. I'm surprised they didn't print his grocery lists and the doodles he scribled on napkins. They must be saving that for the next book, "Things we collected from Kerouac's waste basket." This sort of thing happens all the time and its sad... Anyway, I gave this book an extra star because I seem to remember at least one or two of the pieces being at least mildly interesting. I don't recall which ones.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Atop an Underwood, May 2 2000
This review is from: Atop An Underwood (Hardcover)
Jack Kerouac, with the printing of larger title books (On the Road, Dharma Bums, Desolation Angels...) gained a reputation as the "king" or "father" of the beatniks. A title and position that Kerouac never wanted or ever really accepted. Amidst the caucophenous roar of America in the night with drugs and sex and bachnallian carnality, Kerouac recieved a bad rap as the inventor or sponsor of such activities. While in his life Kerouac did partake in many such things, he was original and utterly different than the dull literary and social scene surrounding he and his friends. Atop an Underwood, I believe, takes us back to when Kerouac was at possibly the height of his burgeoning fascination with the world and those who inhabited it. With prose and poetry alike, Jack allows us into a younger and more lucid, albeit less experienced mind. This book lets us plainly see what Kerouac truly wanted for his life and what he deemed of great enough import to spend so many years perfecting. A very important collection for anyone serious about not only Kerouac the writer, but Kerouac the man.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars "Must" reading for all Jack Kerouac fans.
Use Paul Marion's Jack Kerouac Atop An Underwood (88822-2, $24.95) as an accompanying volume surveying his early stories and other writings: this gathers over sixty previously... Read more
Published on Mar 3 2000 by Midwest Book Review

5.0 out of 5 stars atop an underwood
a good book into the mind set of a young JK. It takes you into the young mind of JK and lets you see how this excellent writer started. Read more
Published on Jan 7 2000 by steve kevlin

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