Tim Forrest

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Dead Eleven
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by Jimmy Juliano (Goodreads Author)
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Nov 11, 2025 07:59AM

 
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J. William Denton
“The spirit of the early settlers, fighting for self-reliance and survival, would be passed down from generation to generation in a vibrant and respected culture of North Carolinians.”
J. William Denton, A History of Eastern North Carolina: Indigenous People, Colonization, and the Birth of a State

“Oh the Beat generation was just a phrase I used in the 1951 written manuscript of On the Road to describe guys like Moriarty who run around the country in cars looking for odd jobs, girlfriends, kicks. It was thereafter picked up by West Coast Leftist groups and turned into a meaning like “Beat mutiny” and “Beat insurrection” and all that nonsense; they just wanted some youth movement to grab on to for their own political and social purposes. I had nothing to do with any of that. I was a football player, a scholarship college student, a merchant seaman, a railroad brakeman on road freights, a script synopsizer, a secretary … And Moriarty-Cassady was an actual cowboy on Dave Uhl’s ranch in New Raymer, Colorado … What kind of beatnik is that?”[22]”
Semmelweis, Jack Kerouac and the Decline of the West

J. William Denton
“The birth of the very soul of the United States can be traced to the first attempts at colonization in North Carolina.”
J. William Denton, A History of Eastern North Carolina: Indigenous People, Colonization, and the Birth of a State

“It is common knowledge but uncommonly practised, that what you think is what you are. A fighter is the sum of his thoughts that occupy his mind on a daily basis. If a fighter decides to actively allow negative thoughts to run rampant in his mind, he will be operating from a negative mental zone.”
Reemus Boxing, The Cus D'Amato Mind: Learn The Simple Secrets That Took Boxers Like Mike Tyson To Greatness

“Neither Ginsberg nor Burroughs achieved the level of fame that Kerouac did in the late 1950s and early 1960s. This is partly because, of the three, Kerouac was the least counter-cultural, the least anti-American in sentiment and purpose. To the contrary, he had a deep love of America as land, as place — On The Road is basically a prose love poem to America — which naturally translated itself into conservative political leanings, albeit of a nonconventional sort. (He famously watched the McCarthy hearings while getting high on marijuana and cheering for McCarthy.)”
Semmelweis, Jack Kerouac and the Decline of the West

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