***Vanities Of Kerouac-Jack Kerouac’s Vanity of Dulouz
Book Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Vanity of Dulouz, Jack Kerouac, Cowan-McCann, 1968
Yes, I have written reams (cyber-reams)
of words touting the be-bop king of the “beats” and something of a muse for me,
Jack Kerouac, many times over the past several years as I have gone back to the
classics to get a feel for what it like to live the be-bop red scare cold war
1950s, the time of my coming of age, by a guy who rejected all that American “golden
age” stuff. That is my Jack Kerouac, thank you, the one who made every
star-struck kid, every angst-filled and alienated kid dream, at least a big
cloud puff dream anyway, of the open road, the living of live for the moment,
and getting out of wherever there was to get out of. Yeah, the guy, the
stone-cold beat guy (beat down, beat around, beat six ways to Sunday, hell,
even beat-ified) who gave us such novelistic classics as On the Road, Dharma Bums and Big
Sur to feast on. And definitely not
the un-max-beat-daddy who disclaimed his step-children, the flower children of
the 1960s, the guy who was drunk as a skunk pissed all over everything on
classmate (NYC’s Horace Mann School) William Buckley’s television show one time.
No,that was some other sad sack writer.
And then as well we come to the time,
that 1968 time, of that sad sack writer’s demise as a be-bop writer in the book
under review, Vanities of Kerouac,
oops, Vanities of Dulouz, which is
the end piece of the whole series of books (17) that he proclaimed were one set
and one vision of Dulouz from the beginning of his literary career. And taken
as part of one set, or taken individually On
The Road, Big Sur, and Dharma Bums hold up and this last novel
published while he was alive doesn’t. This book goes from Jack’s high school,
prep school and truncated college days, through his induction into the Navy,
his time in the Merchant Marines and through to his role in a New York City
murder. Basically the war years in America, the World War II years, the years
before the great open road break-out. While there are snippets of great stuff
over all this retrospective review of the period of his life written some
twenty years later is snotty (to his “wifey,” whom he is ostensively telling
this saga to), self-indulgent and repetitive. This one is strictly for
aficionados and crazed Kerouac guys like me.
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