On the Road On the Road

On the Road

(Duluoz Legend)

    • 3.7 • 40 Ratings
    • $6.99
    • $6.99

Publisher Description

On the Road chronicles Jack Kerouac's years traveling the North American continent with his friend Neal Cassady, "a sideburned hero of the snowy West." As "Sal Paradise" and "Dean Moriarty," the two roam the country in a quest for self-knowledge and experience. Kerouac's love of America, his compassion for humanity, and his sense of language as jazz combine to make On the Road an inspirational work of lasting importance.


Kerouac's classic novel of freedom and longing defined what it meant to be "Beat" and has inspired every generation since its initial publication.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
1976
December 28
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
471
Pages
PUBLISHER
UKA Book Publishing LLC
SELLER
UKA Book publishing LLC
SIZE
1.7
MB

Customer Reviews

mide_88 ,

One of the Most Interesting Characters in Modern Literature

On the Road has been interpreted, debated over and, ironically enough, turned into an engine of capitalism in the fifty some years since it was published. This clash of interpretations is because Kerouac wasn’t writing an adventure story, as it is often read, but a character study of one of the most interesting individuals in modern literature.

While ostensibly the story of Sal Paradise’s adventures across North America, the real focus of the book is on the other central character Dean Moriarty. Sal is fascinated, almost obsessively, with Dean as soon as he meets him. To those who know him only casually, Dean seems like a conman. He works and fudges his way towards enough money to sustain drinking, womanizing and, above all, traveling. All the while he leaves behind a string of heartbroken women and fatherless children across the US. And yet this conman fascinates the more responsible Sal so much that he spends several years of his life following him around trying to understand how Dean seems to know the secret of life.

And, according to the author, Dean really does know the secret, or better put, lack thereof. Dean simply lives life in the moment. He isn’t moral and he isn’t immoral. He is more amoral-he simply doesn’t think in those categories. He isn’t religious but he has a strange religious sense about him. More Eastern than Western he sees the life of work, marriage and responsibility as mostly an illusion to be fled from.

This attitude towards life, this simply to be fully alive every second, can’t be put into so many words. That’s why Dean is forever talking about someone getting IT. IT is simply this sense of living at its utmost that seems like such a banal insight unless expressed as lived in a person like Dean Moriarty.

And this understanding of life comes with an understandable sadness since human life is always finite. Hence the dichotomy between Dean fully feeling IT and his often expressed melancholy.

To be honest, I don’t share Kerouac’s enamor with Dean Moriarty. But then I’m married, work in an office and have a mortgage to meet. Perhaps Kerouac wouldn’t have been so enamored with my choices.

Regardless, the book is a deserved classic for espousing a way of life that people around the world aspire to attain. One can condemn, belittle or otherwise reject this life but it rarely has been better sold. A must read for all who want to understand the type of life many modern people try to imitate.

Don38472829 ,

Editor should be fired

Or maybe there was no editor? Random typos, periods, and commas ruin the reading experience, although the words are all here. Go find a used earlier version for a better reading experience.

More Books by Jack Kerouac

On the Road On the Road
1976
The Dharma Bums The Dharma Bums
1971
On the Road: The Original Scroll On the Road: The Original Scroll
2007
Big Sur Big Sur
1992
And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks
2009
On the road On the road
2022