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Jack Kerouac
Jack Kerouac
March 12, 1922-October 21, 1969
Jack Kerouac,
born in Lowell, Massachusetts, is one of the most important American
authors of the 20th century. Kerouac is best known for his classic
On the Road, a novel that captured the spirit of the time and continues
to inspire readers.
Among Kerouac's many published works are five novels that draw on
his youth in Lowell in the 1920's, 30's, and 40's. Kerouac became
a writer in Lowell. He grew up in its neighborhoods, graduated from
Lowell High School, and earned a scholarship to Columbia University.
In New York, Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs, and others who
formed the core of a movement that Kerouac named "The Beat
Generation." Kerouac became a symbol of American restlessness
and the promise of the open road. His series of autobiographical
novels, known as the Legend of Duluoz, is one of the major literary
achievements of the past century. Kerouac shaped a unique literary
consciousness that has influenced readers, writers, musicians, and
artists for more than fifty years. He died in St. Petersburg, Florida,
in 1969, and is buried in Edson Cemetery in Lowell.
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