The Dharma Bums

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Born on March 12, 1922, in Lowell, Massachusetts, Jack Kerouac's writing career began in the 1940s, but didn't meet with commercial success until 1957, when On the Road was published. The book became an American classic that defined the Beat Generation. Kerouac died on October 21, 1969, from an abdominal hemorrhage, at age 47.

Early Life

Famed writer Jack Kerouac was born Jean-Louis Lebris de Kerouac on March 12, 1922, in Lowell, Massachusetts. A thriving mill town in the mid-19th century, Lowell had become, by the time of Jack Kerouac's birth, a down-and-out burg where unemployment and heavy drinking prevailed. Kerouac's parents, Leo and Gabrielle, were immigrants from Quebec, Canada; Kerouac learned to speak French at home before he learned English at school. Leo Kerouac owned his own print shop, Spotlight Print, in downtown Lowell, and Gabrielle Kerouac, known to her children as Memere, was a homemaker. Kerouac later described the family's home life: "My father comes home from his printing shop and undoes his tie and removes [his] 1920s vest, and sits himself down at hamburger and boiled potatoes and bread and butter, and with the kiddies and the good wife."

Jack Kerouac endured a childhood tragedy in the summer of 1926, when his beloved older brother Gerard died of rheumatic fever at the age of 9. Drowning in grief, the Kerouac family embraced their Catholic faith more deeply. Kerouac's writing is full of vivid memories of attending church as a child: "From the open door of the church warm and golden light swarmed out on the snow. The sound of the organ and singing could be heard."

Kerouac's two favorite childhood pastimes were reading and sports. He devoured all the 10-cent fiction magazines available at the local stores, and he also excelled at football, basketball and track. Although Kerouac dreamed of becoming a novelist and writing the "great American novel," it was sports, not writing, that Kerouac viewed as his ticket to a secure future. With the onset of the Great Depression, the Kerouac family suffered from financial difficulties, and Kerouac's father turned to alcohol and gambling to cope. His mother took a job at a local shoe factory to boost the family income, but, in 1936, the Merrimack River flooded its banks and destroyed Leo Kerouac's print shop, sending him into a spiral of worsening alcoholism and condemning the family to poverty. Kerouac, who was, by that time, a star running back on the Lowell High School football team, saw football as his ticket to a college scholarship, which in turn might allow him to secure a good job and save his family's finances.

Upon graduating from high school in 1939, Kerouac received a football scholarship to Columbia University, but first he had to attend a year of preparatory school at the Horace Mann School for Boys in Brooklyn. So, at the age of 17, Kerouac packed his bags and moved to New York City, where he was immediately awed by the limitless new experiences of big city life. Of the many wonderful new things Kerouac discovered in New York, and perhaps the most influential on his life, was jazz. He described the feeling of walking past a jazz club in Harlem: "Outside, in the street, the sudden music which comes from the nitespot fills you with yearning for some intangible joy—and you feel that it can only be found within the smoky confines of the place." It was also during his year at Horace Mann that Kerouac first began writing seriously. He worked as a reporter for the Horace Mann Record, and published short stories in the school's literary magazine, the Horace Mann Quarterly.

The following year, in 1940, Kerouac began his freshman year as a football player and aspiring writer at Columbia University. However, he broke his leg in one of his first games and was relegated to the sidelines for the rest of the season. Although his leg had healed, Kerouac's coach refused to let him play the next year, and Kerouac impulsively quit the team and dropped out of

出版者:Penguin Classics
作者:Jack Kerouac
出品人:
頁數:224
译者:
出版時間:2006-10
價格:USD 16.00
裝幀:Paperback
isbn號碼:9780143039600
叢書系列:
圖書標籤:
  • 小說 
  • 美國文學 
  • JackKerouac 
  • 垮掉的一代 
  • Kerouac 
  • 英文版 
  • 美國 
  • 傑剋·凱魯亞剋 
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A deluxe edition of Kerouac's 1958 classic

Published just one year after On The Road, this is the story of two men enganged in a passionate search for Dharma or truth. Their major adventure is the pursuit of the Zen Way, which takes them climbing into the High Sierras to seek the lesson of solitude.

For more than seventy years, Penguin has been the leading publisher of classic literature in the English-speaking world. With more than 1,700 titles, Penguin Classics represents a global bookshelf of the best works throughout history and across genres and disciplines. Readers trust the series to provide authoritative texts enhanced by introductions and notes by distinguished scholars and contemporary authors, as well as up-to-date translations by award-winning translators.

具體描述

讀後感

評分

一开始,我以为自己在这本书里找到了生活的本质,可是后来我选择了遗忘它。 2011年的夏天,我和室友乘着火车去拉萨。刚刚坐上车,室友便从书包里掏出一本书来读,那是我第一次知道杰克•凯鲁亚克这个人,第一次知道有一种态度叫“在路上”,知道有一群人此时此刻正遵循着他在...  

評分

"是谁开了这个残忍的玩笑,让人们不得不像老鼠一样,在旷野上疲于奔命?" "难道上帝已经疯了不成?难道他就像个印第安无赖一样,是个反反复复的给予者?他给了 你一片菜园,却又让土变硬变干,然后引来大洪水,让你一切的血汗白流。求求你告诉我 答案,大师兄,不要含糊其辞:...  

評分

"是谁开了这个残忍的玩笑,让人们不得不像老鼠一样,在旷野上疲于奔命?" "难道上帝已经疯了不成?难道他就像个印第安无赖一样,是个反反复复的给予者?他给了 你一片菜园,却又让土变硬变干,然后引来大洪水,让你一切的血汗白流。求求你告诉我 答案,大师兄,不要含糊其辞:...  

評分

宁可睡在不舒服的床上当自由人,也不愿睡在舒服的床上当不自由人。 这就是杰克·凯鲁亚克上路的宣言。 自由地上路,去悟“禅”,悟“空”,不管是在大山上,还是在公路边;不管是放弃了登上峰顶的打算,还是竖起大拇指也拦不到顺路车。此时,他们与寒山子在心灵上交融...  

評分

捧着手中的《达摩流浪者》,思绪随着杰克·凯鲁亚克的脚步,从洛杉矶到旧金山,到墨西哥边境,到北卡罗莱纳,再带着感悟回到旧金山,最后登上喀斯喀特山脉的孤凉峰顶。眼睛里看的,是凯鲁亚克不断起伏的沉静与顿悟,心里却不停地自问:在这个年代,究竟为什么要去看凯鲁亚克?...  

用戶評價

评分

好喜歡,讀爬山的描寫時,快樂的感同身受要飛起來。

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我喜歡爬山的一點也是這樣,在路上不用和彆人說話,也不會感到尷尬。想起去年爬恒山瞭,兩個人默默走在雪地上,凍到發抖,說不瞭話,卻很開心。

评分

The time I spent with The Dharma Bums was the most spiritual period so far, I wake up, meditate, smoke a little bit, for some time really feel the void of life, and eventually took the meditation class when finishing up the book. Kerouac is different from other pure writings I love. He doesn't analyze, but just sense and appreciate. Thank you Jack.

评分

solitude is bliss.

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Ginsberg大叔還是不太適閤讀有聲書啊!

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