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Narrated by:
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Dion Graham
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By:
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Jack Kerouac
About this listen
Jack Kerouac’s last published work is an endearing portrayal of brotherhood and the classic American road trip adventure, viewed through the eyes of a young boy.
This novella tells the story of a ten-year-old Black boy named Pictorial Review “Pic” Jackson, who lives with his grandfather in North Carolina in the 1940s. After his grandfather dies and Pic is living with another relative, his older brother, Slim, shows up to take him out of that dysfunctional home, and they journey from the rural South to New York City.
They head for Harlem, where Slim lives with his girlfriend and where Pic sees firsthand the economic hard times his brother is experiencing. After losing job after job, Slim sends his pregnant girlfriend off to San Francisco to live with her sister. Then the brothers set out to hitchhike their way west, making their way to California across a country suffused with danger, music, love, and hardship.
Told from the point of view of Pic, Kerouac wrote this work in a dialect that is stereotypical for Black American youth of that era.
©1971 The Estate of Jack Kerouac (P)2025 Blackstone PublishingListeners also enjoyed...
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By: Jack Kerouac
-
Self-Portrait
- Collected Writings
- By: Jack Kerouac, Charles Shuttleworth - editor, Paul Maher Jr. - editor
- Narrated by: T. Ryder Smith
- Length: 15 hrs and 7 mins
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-
-
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-
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- Abridged
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Overall
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-
-
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By: Jack Kerouac
-
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- Narrated by: Andrew Eiden
- Length: 4 hrs and 14 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
Written over the course of three days and three nights, The Subterraneans was generated out of the same kind of ecstatic flash of inspiration that produced another one of Kerouac’s early classics, On the Road. Centering around the tempestuous romance and breakup of Leo Percepied and Mardou Fox—two denizens of the 1950s San Francisco underground—The Subterraneans is a tale of dark alleys and smoky rooms, of artists, visionaries, and adventurers existing outside mainstream America’s field of vision.
By: Jack Kerouac
-
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-
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-
-
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-
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- By: Jack Kerouac
- Length: 14 hrs and 53 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
While his masterpiece On the Road languished on the desks of unresponsive editors, Kerouac turned to Buddhism, and in 1953 began writing reading notes on the subject intended for his friend Allen Ginsberg.
By: Jack Kerouac
-
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- By: Jack Kerouac
- Narrated by: Andrew Eiden
- Length: 2 hrs and 15 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
This is a story of philosophy, identity, and the powerful grip of travel, written by an iconic American author at the height of his fame, after spending ten days in France searching for his French heritage. Was the satori handed to him by a taxi driver, a waiter, a monsieur with a dazzlingly beautiful secretary, or while feeling fearful in the foggy streets at 3:00 a.m.? Or was it when hearing a requiem by Mozart in an old church, seeing trees in the Tuileries Garden, or while walking on a bridge over the River Seine?
By: Jack Kerouac
-
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- Narrated by: Andrew Eiden
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- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
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By: Jack Kerouac
-
Vanity of Duluoz
- An Adventurous Education, 1935-46
- By: Jack Kerouac
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- Length: 8 hrs and 22 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
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-
-
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By: Jack Kerouac
-
The Sea Is My Brother
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- Narrated by: Ray Porter
- Length: 4 hrs and 52 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
Written seven years before The Town and the City officially launched his writing career, The Sea Is My Brother marks the pivotal point at which Kerouac began laying the foundations for his pioneering method and signature style. The novel chronicles the misadventures of two seamen who at first seem different but are really two sides of the same coin: 27-year-old Wesley Martin, who “loved the sea with a strange, lonely love,” and William Everhart, an assistant professor of English at Columbia College.
-
-
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- By Anthony on 02-17-14
By: Jack Kerouac
-
Doctor Sax
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- Narrated by: Andrew Eiden
- Length: 6 hrs and 57 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
Jack Kerouac tells the story of Jack Duluoz, a French-Canadian boy growing up in Kerouac’s own birthplace, the dingy factory town of Lowell, Massachusetts. There, Doctor Sax, with his flowing cape, slouched hat, and insinuating leer, is chief among the many ghosts and demons that populate Jack’s fantasy world. Deftly mingling memory and dream, Kerouac captures the accents and textures of his boyhood in Lowell in this novel of a cryptic, apocalyptic hipster phantom.
-
-
The narrator knows rhythm.
- By john in RI on 09-28-24
By: Jack Kerouac