Table of Contents
   PENGUIN POETS
   Title Page
   Copyright Page
   Dedication
   Introduction
   FIRST BOOK
   PANORAMIC CATALOG SKETCH OF BIG EASONBURG
   SECOND BOOK
   PENGUIN POETS
   PENGUIN POETS
   BOOK OF SKETCHES
   JACK KEROUAC was born in Lowell, Massachusetts, in 1922, the youngest of three children in a Franco-American family. He attended local Catholic and public schools and won a scholarship to Columbia University in New York City, where he met Allen Ginsberg and William S. Burroughs. His first novel, The Town and the City, appeared in 1950, but it was On the Road, first published in 1957, that made Kerouac one of the best-known writers of his time. Publication of his many other books followed, among them The Subterraneans, Big Sur, and The Dharma Bums. Kerouac’s books of poetry include Mexico City Blues, Scattered Poems, Pomes All Sizes, Heaven and Other Poems, Book of Blues, and Book of Haikus. Kerouac died in St. Petersburg, Florida, in 1969, at the age of forty-seven.
   GEORGE CONDO is a painter and sculptor who has exhibited extensively in both the United States and Europe, with works in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, and many other institutions. In 1999, Condo received an Academy Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and in 2005 he received the Francis J. Greenberger Award. He is represented by Luhring Augustine in New York, Andrea Caratsch Galley in Zurich, and Sprüth Magers Lee in London.
   ALSO BY JACK KEROUAC
   THE DULUOZ LEGEND
   Visions of Gerard
   Doctor Sax
   Maggie Cassidy
   Vanity of Duluoz
   On the Road
   Visions of Cody
   The Subterraneans
   Tristessa
   Lonesome Traveller
   Desolation Angels
   The Dharma Bums
   Book of Dreams
   Big Sur
   Satori in Paris
   POETRY
   Mexico City Blues
   Scattered Poems
   Pomes All Sizes
   Heaven and Other Poems
   Book of Blues
   Book of Haikus
   OTHER WORK
   The Town and the City
   The Scripture of Golden
   Eternity
   Some of the Dharma
   Old Angel Midnight
   Good Blonde & Others
   Pull My Daisy
   Trip Trap
   Pic
   The Portable Jack Kerouac
   Selected Letters: 1940-1956
   Selected Letters: 1957-1969
   Atop an Underwood
   Door Wide Open
   Orpheus Emerged
   Departed Angels
   Windblown World
   Beat Generation
   PENGUIN BOOKS
   Published by the Penguin Group
   Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.
   Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario,
   Canada M4P 2Y3
   (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.)
   Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
   Penguin Ireland, 25 St Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd)
   Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia
   (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd)
   Penguin Books India Pvt Ltd, 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park,
   New Delhi — 110 017, India
   Penguin Group (NZ), cnr Airborne and Rosedale Roads, Albany, Auckland 1310,
   New Zealand (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd)
   Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank,
   Johannesburg 2196, South Africa
   Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
   First published in Penguin Books 2006
   Copyright © John Sampas, Literary Representative,
   the Estate of Stella Sampas Kerouac, 2006
   Introduction copyright © George Condo, 2006
   All rights reserved
   LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
   Kerouac, Jack, 1922-1969.
   Book of sketches, 1952-53 / Jack Kerouac ; introduction by George Condo. p. cm.
   eISBN : 978-0-142-00215-5
   The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.
   http://us.penguingroup.com
   Dedicated to the memory of
   Caroline Kerouac Blake
   INTRODUCTION
   Thoughts about Jack Kerouac
   Read this Book of Sketches and you’ll be amazed at what a genius Jack Kerouac was.
   These poems just breathe and flow, and when Jack plays the Blues, which he often does, his blues are truly sad — they are sadness without humor, without the joking and backslapping that come from good times. They are the real unfunny truth. Like when his older brother Gerard died. This is one of the saddest poems ever written.
   I learned a lot from Jack, and I can say all this not being a writer. At the age of fourteen he was the first radical I ever heard of. When I first became aware that he wrote his novel The Subterraneans in one long stretch, unrevised straight out of his head in three days, and that he had a “steel trap” memory — it was the combination of these two very important factors that inspired a new way of painting for me. From then on I combined memory, speed, and spontaneity to create most of my work. I relied on the Kerouacian notion of “the unrevised method of creation,” and it became the key to a pure uncontrollable mastery of chaos.
   As a reader, you would think Kerouac was talking, not writing. Yet it was precisely everyday speech that he was able to conjure up. He, like Jackson Pollock, found a way to take something all of us see and use every day and turn it into Art. This new language of Jack Kerouac was the one we had always been speaking. You just had to know what you were talking about before you spoke.
   Jack’s concept of writing was also very art-inspired — he drew on André Masson’s Automatic Painting and Charlie Parker’s informed improvisations to carve out his unique style and destination. He called upon Leonardo da Vinci’s method of observation in his studies of flowers, storms, anatomy, and physiognomy. Jack is to literature what Charlie Parker was to music or Jackson Pollock was to painting. It’s that simple. Proust should be invoked here, too. He must have been one of Kerouac’s favorite writers because he used him to describe Miles Davis’s phrasing in order to enhance a cultural value that had not yet been perceived — he spoke of Miles’s playing “eloquent phrases, just like Marcel Proust.”
   To look at Edward Hopper’s paintings of the late 1920s and early 1930s is to see the destitute ambience of New York City and its existential paradox — it is a place at once industrious and at the same time empty, lonely, and unanswered. These qualities are found in some of Kerouac’s poetical sketches — gas stations, old barges, oil tankers, silhouettes of a positive industry set against dark empty exteriors that have been forgotten and misplaced: Indian land or an old gold mine, towns at one time prosperous now distinctly gone, reflecting an America that no one wanted to admit was still there.
   Jack himself had a cubist take on Hopper — not unlike Joseph Stella’s faceted Brooklyn Bridge — cubist in the sense that the fragmentation is not of imagery but of time and space. 			
					        					 			 The elements of chronology in these sketches are here of no importance. In fact, Jack has made a note, “Not Necessarily Chronological,” this being on his mind — in a larger sense referring to all the poems in the Book of Sketches, but also referring to the sequence of words within each poem. That’s what gives a “sketch” its edge, the fractured, almost “cut-up” feel that the descriptions carry. They seem to be running straight at you and then split up unexpectedly into multiple directions simultaneously, ending on a resolved note somehow related and yet striking out in a new direction.
   Unlike Hopper, though, Kerouac did not long for the past — he did not reminisce for the sake of nostalgia — or transpose the European masters’ sensibility. Rather, in the 1950s he broke free and prophetically dreamed a future world of young people wearing Levi’s and being cut loose from all the crumbling conventions. Jack saw into the future, he lived in the future. That is exactly what happened in the 1960s to society, but by then Jack was too old and self-abused to have any pleasure from the world he predicted.
   As the sketches tell us, anything that Jack saw was important. Anything that caught his eye and that he wrote about became priceless. Because in the way that an artist like Picasso could see with his brush, Jack could see with his pen. He was able to capture the spirit of his time without making anything up. And as it came to us from nowhere it certainly was astounding how concrete it all is now. It is as if the only true picture of humanity we will ever have was given to us by Jack Kerouac. All else is false and dressed up. Only Jack and Vincent van Gogh told the inner truth.
   — George Condo, November 2005
   BOOK OF SKETCHES
   JACK KEROUAC
   Printed Exactly As They Were Written On the Little Pages in the Notebooks I Carried in My Breast Pocket 1952 Summer to 1954 December............
   (Not Necessarily Chronological)
   FIRST BOOK
   Rocky Mt Aug. 7 ’52
   Changed now to
   dungaree shorts, gaudy
   green sandals, blue vest
   with white borders & a
   little festive lovergirl ribbon
   in her hair Carolyn prepares
   the supper —
   “I better go over there &
   fix that lawnmower,” says
   Paul standing in the kitchen
   with LP at his thigh.
   “Supper’ll be ready at
   six.”
   Glancing at his watch
   Paul goes off - to his landlord
   Jack up the road — a man his
   age, of inherited wealth,
   who spends all day in big
   Easonburg walking around
   or sitting in his vast brick
   house (Jacky Lee’s father)
   or walking down the road
   to see his 2 new cows —
   On the kitchen floor is
   a pan of dog meal mixed
   with milk & water but the
   bird dog Bob isnt hungry,
   just let out of the pen
   he lays greedily sopping
   up happy in-house hours
   under the d.r. table — a
   big affectionate dopey
   beauty with great bony
   snakehead & big brown eyes
   & heartshaped mottled
   ears falling like the locks
   of a pretty girl do fall —
   in the Fall a gliding phantom
   in the pale fields.
   Carolyn takes a pile
   of dishes from the cupboard
   & silverware from the
   drawer & carries them
   into the diningroom. Out of
   the ref. she takes ready
   to bake biscuit doughs &
   unwraps them from their
   cellophane, stuffs waste paper
   in the corner bag that
   sits in a wastebasket
   out of sight — She
   prepares the aluminum
   silex for coffee — never
   puts an extra scoop for
   the pot — makes weak
   American housewife coffee
   — but who’s to
   notice, the Prez. of the
   Waldorf Astoria? — She
   slams a frying pan on a
   burner — singing “I hadnt
   anyone till you & with
   my lonely heart demanding
   it, f-a-i-t-h must
   have a hand in it — ”
   mistaking “fate” — Out
   comes the bacon & the
   yellow plastic
   basket of eggs — What’s
   she going to make? Under
   the faucet she cleans
   garden fresh tomatos
   from Mrs Harris’ —
   She’s boiling potatos in a
   pot — they’ve been there a
   half hour — Thru her
   little kitchen cupboard
   window, framed like a
   picture, see the old
   redroofed flu cure barn
   of the X farm — weary
   gray wood in the eternities
   of time — rickety poles
   around it — the tobacco,
   already picked from
   the bottom a foot up,
   pale & fieldsy before the
   solemn backdrop of
   that forest bush —
   One intervening sad English
   cone haystack — The
   little children of the
   Carolina suppertimes see
   this & think: “And does
   the forest need to eat?
   In the night that’s
   coming does the forest
   know? Why is that dish
   cloth hanging there so
   still — & like the
   forest — has no name
   I know of — gloop — ”
   Carolyn Blake is making
   bacon & eggs & boiled
   potatos for supper because
   lately the family’s been
   eating up breakfast
   foods — just cereal & toast —
   “Hm what pretty bacon,”
   she says out loud. On
   the radio now’s the
   Lone Ranger. Lingering
   statics clip & clop
   amongst its William
   Tell Overtures — a
   rooster foolish crows —
   Hand on hip, feet
   crossed, casually, a cig
   burning out in the ashtray,
   she picks the bacon over
   with a long cook fork.
   “Hum hum hum” she hums.
   Paul, having fixed the Jack
   lawn mower, is in the yard
   finishing the part of the lawn
   last overlooked. The
   deep rich fat grass lies in
   serried heaps along the
   trail of his machine
   with the ditch, the road,
   & the white road sign
   “Easonburg” & yellow
   “Stop” sign beyond — &
   signs on a post pointing in
   all the directions — ←
   Route 95 2 → US 64
   ↓ Rocky Mt 3 ↑Sandy
   Cross 4 — Paul, hat off,
   sleeves rolled, glumly &
   absentmindedly pushes at
   his work; the motor makes
   a drowsy suppertime growl
   like the sound of a motor-
   boat on some mystic lake
   — At the crossroads store
   groups of farmers have
   gathered & smoke & sit
   now. Heavenly mystical
   lights have meanwhile
   appeared in the sky as
   the great machinery
   continues in the High.
   Intense interest is being
   shown in the lawncutter —
   Jack himself has just driven
   over (on his way to town)
   & is parked on lawn’s 			
					        					 			 edge
   discussing it with a young
   farmer in overalls & white &
   green baseball cap who app.
   w. to buy it — Little
   Paul runs to hear them
   talk — At the store
   five people are watching
   intently. Men are be-
   mused by machines. Americans,
   by new, efficient
   machines; Jack had the
   money to buy a deluxe
   cutter — 2 Negros
   & 2 white farmers stare
   intently at Paul in his
   lawn, from the store, as
   he backs up the car
   to get to the grass
   underneath it — Not once
   has he lookt up & acknowledged
   his watchers — works on.
   Jack has driven off proudly
   — Still another man
   joins the watchers — &
   now even George steps
   out to see — now that
   Jack’s driven off to whom
   he hasnt spoken in years —
   his twin brother. In Southern
   accents — “Thats whut
   ah think!” — they
   discuss that splendid
   grasscutter — Cars come
   & park, & go — Cars
   hurry on the hiway to
   home,
   “Wait till after
   supper,” says Carolyn to
   LP, “we’re ready to
   eat now — ” as
   he complains
   “Ah — nao!”
   but the complaint’s not
   serious & doesnt last
   long — And the air
   is fragrant from cut
   grass. “Come eat!”
   And suddenly not a
   soul’s at the store as
   for other & similar &
   just as blank reasons,
   they’ve gone to
   the silence
   the suppers of their own
   mystery.
   Why should a chair be far
   from a book case!
   P: “Well that confound
   yard is mowed.”
   C: “Fi-na-lee.”
   P: “Eat some supper
   boy.”
   C: — “What is it 27
   now? 28? It musta
   gone up, I thought