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The Subterraneans, Kerouac
Posted: January 21st, 2006, 10:04 am
by Arcadia
This edition of Anagrama has an interesting introduction by Fernanda Pivano.
I´m in the page 60 and I´m already bored about Mardou. The book reminds me somehow to Cortázar´s Rayuela., with the difference that the Maga was more misterious in a Nadja-way. (I´ll continue reading).
Posted: January 22nd, 2006, 9:58 am
by Marksman45
I failed to get through it.
The tone is so different from other Kerouac books.
Posted: January 28th, 2006, 1:23 am
by e_dog
IT'S a quick read. some interesting parts especially with the Corso- like character and some jazz stuff. there's a audio excerpt with Kerouac reading a few passages, in the set of recording released by Rhino a number o years back. definitely not his best novel, and kind of silly that the setting was totally flipped from East Coast to West -- New York to San Fran.
how's it like Rayuela?
Posted: January 28th, 2006, 2:22 am
by Axanderdeath
I do not remeber a thing about it--I think I read it at the university library during morning shits--thought you all like to know that--I liked the --thing--any way iit is an okay book to pinch a laof too...
Posted: January 28th, 2006, 4:36 pm
by Marksman45
e-dog, are you saying that the story originally took place in NYC? That would make the title make more sense...
I couldn't read it, it was grueling for me.
Maybe it's because I already know Mardou and had no interest in hearing her story again
Posted: January 28th, 2006, 10:35 pm
by Artguy
It's hard for me to give an objective criticism of The Subterraneans as i am in rapture with every word that Kerouac ever wrote. I did a series of paintings about this novel called The Subterraneans....
www.kurtscanadianart.com . Kerouacs masterpiece as i believe it to be was Some Of The Dharma which is one of if not the seminal pieces of Buddhist literature written in the 20th century....just my humble opinion...

Posted: January 28th, 2006, 10:37 pm
by Artguy
It's hard for me to give an objective criticism of The Subterraneans as i am in rapture with every word that Kerouac ever wrote. I did a series of paintings about this novel called The Subterraneans
http://www.kurtscanadianart.com.... Kerouacs masterpiece as i believe it to be was Some Of The Dharma which is one of if not the seminal pieces of Buddhist literature written in the 20th century....just my humble opinion...

Posted: January 29th, 2006, 7:47 am
by Dave The Dov
Yeah I read "The Subterraneans" and it was hard to follow for me. But then again Kerouac was writing with a sense of whirl wind romance for Mardou and the life that was going on around him at that time.
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Posted: January 29th, 2006, 9:10 am
by firsty
the facts of it did indeed take place in nyc.
it's difficult to read any of kerouac's books if the expectation or hope is to get too far into the sympathy of any female character.
Posted: January 29th, 2006, 10:40 am
by Arcadia
yeah, the introduction says that the story related took first place in New York.
"it's difficult to read any of kerouac's books if the expectation or hope is to get too far into the sympathy of any female character": you´re right, that´s the main difference with Cortázar. I think that one of the rayuela streams is also about youth, literature, love, obssession, fear, jazz, friends, alcohol and a city.
artguy: beautiful serie!. For me The Subterraneans looks mostly like your Subterraneas 10, with the difference that I knew inmediately that I liked the painting.
I´m still in pag. 60-63
Posted: January 29th, 2006, 4:19 pm
by Marksman45
It wasn't anything to do with sympathy; it was that Mardou was like a conglomerate of several girls I know, but specifically a conglomerate of the parts I can't stand
Posted: January 29th, 2006, 5:19 pm
by firsty
i mean 'sympathy' in the sense that the reader identifies with her. he's coming at her from a certain point of view morphed thru bad feelings about women in general, so you're not going to get a necessarily kind account.
Posted: January 30th, 2006, 7:40 pm
by Arcadia
now I´m at page 90. Things changed. The narrator bored me. Then Mardou looks more human. Then both were more interesting. And some three of four naked-condensated lines per page that are great.
Posted: January 30th, 2006, 8:53 pm
by Artguy
Arcadia your next read must be Dharma Bums...catches more of the San Fran groove including night of the Howl....mountain climbing with crazy Zen Japhy Ryder...
Posted: January 30th, 2006, 9:17 pm
by Marksman45
Oh yeah, Dharma Bums is great. One of my top 3 favourite Kerouac books
(3 - Big Sur; 2 - Dharma Bums; 1 - Dr. Sax)