New Englanders have long revered sober, canonical writers like Alcott, Hawthorne, Frost, Thoreau, and Updike. Which may be why we’ve tended to ignore Jack Kerouac, the Beat Generation icon and poet, and let San Francisco and New York claim him as their own. Though Kerouac was born in the blue-collar Lowell neighborhood of Centralville, today one of the only remembrances of him in that city is the small and modest Kerouac Park, which sits two blocks off the main drag, Merrimack Street. Kerouac would have turned 90 this month, so as a posthumous birthday present, it’s time we put him in the pantheon of our region’s great authors.
Why isn’t he there already? Maybe it’s because we like our writing pristine to the point of prim. Kerouac’s was messy, decadent, and urbane, and he wrote about messed-up, indulgent people — or “fornicators and masturbators,” as a Lowell housewife once complained to his face. But the main reason is that most of us know only one of his novels, On the Road, which ignored New England. Instead, it described road trips across the U.S. during the late 1940s, as Kerouac’s alter ego, Sal Paradise, sought a new way to live that was wild, free, and poetic. On the Road made Kerouac a worldwide pop-culture figure. It was translated into dozens of languages, and has inspired generations of free thinkers ever since.
Lowell is honoring Kerouac's birthday with a weekend of events, but let's expand that celebration statewide. We're declaring March Jack Kerouac Month: Pick up a copy of The Town and the City — his first novel, covering life in Massachusetts — grab a bottle of wine, and dig in.
See also: (March 8-11, Lowellcelebrateskerouac.org).
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