![]() ![]() Jack Kerouac didn’t just chronicle, but lived the Beat lifestyle, and ended up dying in 1969 of liver damage related to his longstanding drinking habit. Five decades after it was first published, Jack Kerouacs seminal beat novel 'On the Road' finally finds its way to the big screen, in a production from awar. As Kerouac now became a popular, acclaimed author, he continued to write, including The Dharma Bums (probably his most famous novel after On The Road). ![]() A now-famous New York Times review championed it as a masterpiece and the essential novel of the Beat Generation. ![]() He had a difficult time finding a publisher for the book because of its racy content, but the novel was finally published in 1957. Kerouac then began working towards a new project and, in 1951, sat down to write On The Road in a brief three-week period of spontaneous writing. He lived with his family in New York, where he published his first novel, The Town and the City, to little acclaim in 1950. ![]() (The Beats formed a kind of loose literary movement centered around rejecting societal norms and freely indulging in alcohol, drugs, and sexual liberty.) Kerouac joined the Merchant Marine service and even served briefly in the Navy, before writing his first novel in 1942. He soon dropped out of college, though, and became friends with some of the people who would become associated with the Beat movement, including Allen Ginsberg. Born in 1922 in Lowell, Massachusetts, Jack Kerouac grew up in a Catholic household and eventually earned a football scholarship to Columbia University. ![]()
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