Tag: Benzedrine

Jack Kerouac – On the Road | Review

Title: On the Road

Author: Jack Kerouac

Type: Fiction/Non-Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 286

Rating: 8/10

 

Jack Kerouac - On the Road

Jack Kerouac – On the Road

 

Is this the real life? Or is this just fantasy? Kerouac’s most famous book, and one that many people call a masterpiece, is a weird mix of both – many of the characters are thinly-disguised caricatures of some of the people that he really knew, like Old Bull Lee instead of William Burroughs and, of course, Dean Moriarty instead of Neal Cassady.

In fact, the coolest thing about this book is the way in which it portrays some of the notorious beat generation writers that I love so much – you get a real glimpse at what life was like for them as they freewheeled their way across America in the 1950s.

And the writing is tight, too – in fact, it was with this book that Kerouac established his trademark style, in which he writes a stream of consciousness ramble with few corrections along the way. Legend has it that he wrote this entire book in the space of three weeks, while drugged up on benzedrine; it’s also a long, continuous manuscript – Kerouac taped the paper together so that he wouldn’t have to stop for something as trivial as adding a new sheet of paper to the typewriter.

On the Road is one of those rare books which everyone on the planet should read – it’s an important book, a milestone in the world of literature, a book that came along and changed everything and turned Kerouac and his talented friends in to stardom, almost overnight. If that’s not a good enough reason to read it then I don’t know what is – just go grab a copy, now.

 

Jack Kerouac

Jack Kerouac

 

Click here to buy On the Road.


Graham Greene – The Confidential Agent | Review

Title: The Confidential Agent

Author: Graham Greene

Type: Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 328

Rating: 7/10

 

Graham Greene - The Confidential Agent

Graham Greene – The Confidential Agent

 

The Confidential Agent is one of Greene’s early novels, and you can tell – in fact, the author himself was so displeased with it that he wanted to publish it under a pseudonym, although it went on to get decent reviews. I can see why – it’s pretty good, on the upper side of average, and for any other writer would threaten to be one of their better novels. Sadly, the case is different for Greene – his output was of such a high quality that this is overshadowed by his best.

It might not be as memorable as some of the author’s other work, but there are still plenty of reasons to pick up a copy, especially if you’re already a fan of Greene’s – the characterisation is pretty good, and the story-line has plenty in it to interest readers of all kinds of novels, although it obviously has an edge if you’re a reader of espionage.

In fact, one of the most notable points about the book is that it was written over the course of six weeks, in a rush of Benzedrine – a little like Jack Kerouac was rumoured to do during the creation of On the Road, although I saw a museum exhibition that dismissed that as a fallacy. Still, the book doesn’t exactly feel rushed, and if anything it’s amazing that he managed to get so many words down over such a short period of time – I know that I wouldn’t be able to do it.

But overall, I stand by my initial observations – there are better Graham Greene books on the market, and I’d be doing him a disservice if I recommended this one and then someone went out to buy a copy and felt disappointed. There are just better introductions to his work, like The Quiet American and Our Man in Havana.

 

Graham Greene

Graham Greene

 

Click here to buy The Confidential Agent.