Now in a paperback edition, David Amram retraces in this engaging memoir the creative paths he followed through restless days and long, exhilarating nights with his collaborator and friend Jack Kerouac. With candor and humor, Amram illuminates the private side of Kerouac, his extraordinary intellect and his ardent pursuit of music and literature. Among the last of a generation that altered the style and substance of the arts in its time, Amram also celebrates in this wise and affecting book the renaissance of interest in Kerouac’s work three decades after his death. Photographs are included. “[A] compassionate, firsthand portrait.”—Eric P. Nash, The New York Times Book Review “... every bit as radiant as his enduringly popular first memoir, Vibrations.”—Donna Seaman, Booklist “[A]n unpretentious, freewheeling festival of highly diverting tales.”—Kirkus Reviews “[Offbeat] is most valuable for its narrative of the ongoing restoration of Kerouac’s literary reputation.”—Paul A. Bergin, St. Petersburg Times
This book was frustrating. I enjoyed the first half but the second half felt almost entirely like self promotion and bragging, with a lot of repetition. I wanted to like it more.
I enjoyed this book a lot, it provides a sort of behind-the-scenes feel to a culture of writers who mostly wrote about themselves, but on a more spiritual and emotional sense. It’s also told by a jazz musician who had a more musical take on the poetry and lifestyle of the time. Side note: I went to Amoeba and found one of Dave Amram’s records. It’s really good, and employs an original and beautiful style of jazz.
David Amram writes of his relationship with Kerouac from the perspective of a lifelong, devoted friend. Perhaps it was his intended writing style, or just his natural voice, but Amram maintains a neutrality of tone that allows his actions, even those after Kerouac's death, to speak for the tenderness and affection that existed between these two artists/friends/colleagues before, during and after the beginning of On the Road's success. After reading a variety of essays on the Beat Generation writers, as well as several of their works, this book (about which I'd never heard) became what I'd been unknowingly looking for all along, in terms of rounding off my perception of these artists from that powerful, creative moment of the 50s and 60s that changed American literature indefinitely. An important read for fans of this fondly remembered era.
Great book. Of the many books out there that discuss the Beat generation, and Jack Kerouac in particular, this volume feels the most honest and heartfelt. Mr Amrans's personal recollections give the book an overall homespun feeling, that most of these Kerouac memoirs sometimes lack. Would recommend it to anyone with an interest in Jack Kerouac and the time period.