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Modern Classics Town And The City
 
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Modern Classics Town And The City (Paperback)


4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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4.6 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars You can go home again, Jun 28 2004
By IRA Ross (HOBOKEN, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Town and the City (Paperback)
This semi-autobiographical work covering the life and times of Jack Kerouac before he went "On the Road" comes full circle. It begins in the small town of Galloway, Massachusettes, wends its way to the city of New York, then finally returns to Galloway. Peter Martin has a large, nurturing, and close knit family. As happens in many families, as the children grow older and become young adults, they begin to drift apart from the family unit. Peter, who achieves fame as a college football star, later tires of college and small town life, and falls captive to the lure of New York City, where he meets several bohemian types, two of whom are readily identifiable as Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs. Francis, one of Peter's brothers, gets accepted into Harvard and falls in with a bookish, intellectual sort of man. One of the Martin sisters, Liz, decides to run off with a musician who specializes in be-bop. Added to this equation are family financial woes, a father with a gambling problem, and the start of the second world war, in which a couple of the brothers enlist in the armed services to fight the war against fascism in Europe.

I have to admit that I was occasionally put off by Kerouac's tendency to over sentimentalize the events in the life of the Martin family, but what Kerouac has by and large created is a warm and loving portrait of the complex nature of family relationships. The book shows, perhaps surprisingly, that people most often have the most heatedly passionate arguments with those family members whom they most love. What especially stood out for me in this book was Peter's Galloway friendship with Alexander Panos, a particularly sensitive and emotional young Greek-American who wrote poetry. There was also a strange and very funny scene in a New York subway where Martin's Jewish-American friend utilizes a unique method to "spy" on another rider, perhaps foreshadowing the Jack Kerouac that came after _The Town and the City_.

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5.0 out of 5 stars I Love This Book, Jan 29 2004
By Kenneth M. Goodman (Cleveland, Ohio United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Town and the City (Paperback)
I had read virtually everything ever written by Jack, excluding
this book, because I'd heard it was his "Tom Wolf" novel and he'd
yet to develop his own style...so after all these years I finally
got around to reading it...and was absolutely overwhelmed by
how great it is...so if you're a Kerouac lover and haven't read
this "family saga" yet, I can't recommend it highly enough.
Other reviewers have described it well, so I'll just mention two
highlights...both in the "City" section: the first is where
Levinsky (Allen Ginsberg of course) plays head games with people
on a New York subway car (beginning around p. 376) and the second
is this fantastic/funny/brilliant monologue about marijuana and
cockroaches, (around p. 403). In a way, I'm glad I waited all
this time to finally get around to reading this wonderful novel.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Kerouac We Never Knew, Jan 16 2002
This review is from: The Town and the City (Paperback)
Yes, this is Kerouac's first published novel. Yes, it is fundamentally autobiographical. Yes, it is stylistically derivative of Thomas Wolfe's epic novels. But there is more here for Kerouac devotees than these standard descriptions.

First, when centered between the works written immediately before and after The Town and the City (specifically, the selections of short pieces recently published in Atop an Underwood and Kerouac's second published novel, On the Road)a clear picture of a writer's development emerges. The Town and the City has a sustained narrative that builds to a satisfying conclusion. This would change over time as Kerouac became more focused on episodic writing in his novels--for instance, lengthy descriptions of jazz club settings in The Subteraneans, or maybe the best example, the tape transcriptions of conversations with Neal Cassady in Visions of Cody--and found little need for pure resolution. The beginning of this shift is noticeable in On the Road, when the detailed re-creation of a car ride takes precedent over plot. This type of writing is not to be found in The Town and the City.

Second, Kerouac's development as a human being presents itself as his themes are precipitated by the death of his father and the implicit responsibility for his family Kerouac (embodied in the character of Peter) would wrestle with for the rest of his life.

Third, Kerouac, almost shockingly, finds his literary voice in the final two-hundred pages of the novel. While most of the book moves along with the languid prose of a young writer imitating his idols, the "City" sections show Kerouac opening up, taking more risks, and discovering the type of writing that would become his trademark: Rythmic, unique, and energized accounts of characters almost willing their lives to unfold before them, and dead-on, perfectly real dialogue that makes you believe Kerouac had a tape recorder with him everywhere he went.

Finally, for those who've studied Kerouac's life and those that have visited his hometown of Lowell, you will see Kerouac struggling to fictionalize people, places, and events. This is a struggle he pretty much abandoned with On The Road, going so far as to use "Real Names" in the original draft. It is especially apparent in The Town and the City when Waldo committs suicide by jumping out of a window at Kenneth Wood's apartment. This episode was undoubtedly based on Lucien Carr's murder of David Kammerer. But Kerouac changes the murder to a suicide, and then attempts to fill Kenneth Wood with the same guilt Lucien Carr felt over the incident by implying that Kenneth might have pushed Waldo out the window. The result? It's not believable. Something Kerouac himself must have felt.

Kerouac claimed that the original inspiration for his spontaneous prose style was a forty-page letter he received from Neal Cassady before writing On the Road. The Town and the City shows Kerouac was already discovering a voice of his own and exploring the places and people that would dominate his fiction for the remainder of his career. It was that letter, though, that hurled him into a different realm, showing him the possibilities of a wild, new bop prosody, later leading to a recognition of Kerouac as a pioneering, risk-taking, totally unique writer. Had Cassady never sent that letter, we might well be talking of Kerouac today as a stylistic extension of Thomas Wolfe, or we may not be talking of him at all. Still, The Town and the City proves, with or without Neal's letter, Kerouac had greatness in him all along.

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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars My Favourite Beat Angel...
The Town And The City tracks the lives of the Martin family (5 sons and 3 daughters) growing up, living loving and discovering themselves, the world and others in the small town... Read more
Published on Aug 9 2000 by claire

4.0 out of 5 stars The Father of On the Road.
This is where it all started. Keroauc's first novel is a tough read. Not "tough" as in the crazed style of Dr. Sax, but "tough" as in "meticulous. Read more
Published on Aug 7 2000 by Rayv

5.0 out of 5 stars If there were only six stars to give...
It is rare that I've had the feeling that I didn't want a novel to end -- this one did that to me. No exageration! -- an absolute joy for me to read! Pure magic! Read more
Published on Jul 3 2000 by Maximus Atheist

5.0 out of 5 stars Portrait of the artist as a young man.
For hipster Kerouac gurus and one-time readers of On the Road alike, The Town and the City offers a much needed pre-spotlight autobiographical perspective on an incredibly... Read more
Published on Jun 23 1998 by Goldtoof11@aol.com

5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely Jack

This book is a poingnant tale of the trials of life, as seen through the eyes of a boy, who watches his family changing and aging, even as he does the same. Read more

Published on Nov 7 1997 by chya@orbitec.com

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