Liberation Lit discussion

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On the Road
How did "On The Road" affect you?
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Brian
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Apr 12, 2013 12:20PM

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Well, we were on that same road together, John, as you have pretty much described my youth as well. The one additional book that I loved and sent me off into the world was Dylan Thomas'unfinished novel "Adventures in the Skin Trade".
The reason I bring it up is because it is the story of a young man who wakes up early, before the household, packs a bag to run away, then goes down to the kitchen where he destroys his mother's prized collection of china cups. Then, taking up his pack he exits. Why destroy the cups? Because he knew he would be tempted to return home when things got tough out in the real world...but by destroying her dream, he knew he would never be allowed back in the front door of his former home.
Kerouac and Thomas were my guides to individualization and separation from my family unit.They said there was a big world out there just waiting to be explored...all it took from me was a thumb and a sense of adventure. What happened to that spirit? Is it now in a video game?
The reason I bring it up is because it is the story of a young man who wakes up early, before the household, packs a bag to run away, then goes down to the kitchen where he destroys his mother's prized collection of china cups. Then, taking up his pack he exits. Why destroy the cups? Because he knew he would be tempted to return home when things got tough out in the real world...but by destroying her dream, he knew he would never be allowed back in the front door of his former home.
Kerouac and Thomas were my guides to individualization and separation from my family unit.They said there was a big world out there just waiting to be explored...all it took from me was a thumb and a sense of adventure. What happened to that spirit? Is it now in a video game?

Always looking over the next rise for the answer? Always hoping some logic to the search would emerge? Always trying to feel good about not feeling good along the way. Always looking for a better answer. Perhaps these are simply the restless qualities of the American mind?
And I agree with you, John. They do seem to permeate American literature from J.Fenimore Copper's The Deer Slayer to Travels With Charlie by Steinbeck.
And I agree with you, John. They do seem to permeate American literature from J.Fenimore Copper's The Deer Slayer to Travels With Charlie by Steinbeck.

Writing my own novel on the Sixties, Crystal Ships, the paucity of good novels written in the period struck me also. Those who lived through the period were more influenced by writers of earlier periods, like Kerouac or Orwell, than contemporary writers. Perhaps, relating the Woodstock thread, that is because contemporary music became a more effective means of expression than literature during those troubling years.
