Hey Jack Kerouac, Happy Birthday

Jack Kerouac On March 12, 1922, novelist and poet Jack Kerouac was born in Lowell, Massachusetts. After showing early promise as a scholar and football player, Kerouac attended Columbia University but then dropped out.  He was later kicked out of the Navy on psychiatric grounds.

On the Road

By the late 1940s, Kerouac was finding some promise with his writing.  But it would be the 1957 publication of his book based on his travels, On the Road, that would make him famous as an important figure of the Beat Generation.

Surprisingly, a year earlier in 1956, Kerouac threatened to never publish the book. But even after gaining fame from On the Road, Kerouac had trouble finding peace and happiness. He died from an abdominal hemorrhage in 1969 at the age of 47.

In this clip from The Steve Allen Plymouth Show, Allen interviews Kerouac in 1959.  And Kerouac reads from his book while Allen and the band plays jazzy music in the background. Check it out.

On the Road was made into a 2012 film directed by Walter Salles and starring Sam Riley, Garrett Hedlund, Kristen Stewart in 2012. But one seems more likely to run into Kerouac in songs rather than in films.

“Hey Jack Kerouac”

There are several Kerouac-inspired songs, as listed by Raditaz. Probably the most famous creative work that is about Kerouac is the 10,000 Maniacs song, “Hey Jack Kerouac.” The song first appeared on the band’s 1987 album In My Tribe.

When the group appeared on MTV Unplugged on April 21, 1993, one of the songs they performed was “Hey Jack Kerouac.” Merchant introduced the song for the 10,000 Maniacs by reading about Kerouac.  Her reading apparently was from the introduction in her copy of On the Road.

The song portrays Kerouac as a misunderstood artistic soul (“little boy lost in our little world that hated/ and that dared to drag him down”). And the song also mentions other of the Beat writers like Allen Ginsberg (“Allen baby, why so jaded?”) and William S. Burroughs (“Billy, what a saint they’ve made you”). Still, others have pointed out that the song complains about the effects of the over popularization of the Beats.

Lead singer Natalie Merchant wrote the song with the band’s guitarist Rob Buck who passed away in December 2000. You may easily tell they try to capture Kerouac’s writing style in the chorus:

Maniacs In My Tribe You chose your words from mouths of babes got lost in the wood.
Cool junk booting madmen, street minded girls
In Harlem howling at night.
What a tear-stained shock of the world,
You’ve gone away without saying goodbye.

I do not know what Jack Kerouac would have thought of the song or if he would have agreed with the sentiments. But it would have been cool if he would have stuck around to tell us with his clever use of language. Happy birthday Jack.

What is your favorite work inspired by Jack Kerouac? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    The Search for Missing WWII Pilot Billie Harris

    Fighter Pilot Billie Harris In honor of Flag Day, we take a look at a touching story from World War II. On a recent CBS Sunday Morning and CBS Evening News, Steve Hartman’s On the Road series followed a mystery of what happened to fighter pilot Billie Harris, who disappeared during World War II. On July 17, 1944, 1st Lt. Harris went on a mission over Nazi-occupied northern France and he never returned.

    Harris’s widow, Peggy Harris of Vernon, Texas, never received official word about what happened to her husband. At one point, she was told he was missing, then that he was coming home, and then that he was dead and buried one place, and then that he was buried somewhere else. Peggy, who had married Billie just six weeks before he went off to war, began asking questions.

    Through the decades, she continued looking for answers. Finally, Billie’s cousin found the answer in Billie’s military records. You may see part one of the story, “They Don’t Forget” below.

    And here is part two of the story:

    I got something in my eye near the end, around the point where we find out that there is a street in a town in France named after Billie. But it is worth watching the whole story.

    What do you think of the story of Billie Harris? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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