The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: The Voice Is All: The Lonely Victory of Jack Kerouac, Joyce Johnson

The Voice Is All: The Lonely Victory of Jack Kerouac

Joyce Johnson

A groundbreaking new biography of Jack Kerouac from the author of the award-winning memoir Minor Characters

Joyce Johnson brilliantly peels away layers of the Kerouac legend in this compelling new book. Tracking Kerouac's development from his boyhood in Lowell, Massachusetts, through his fateful encounters with Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs, Neal Cassady, and John Clellon Holmes to his periods of solitude and the phenomenal breakthroughs of 1951 that resulted in his composition of On the Road followed by Visions of Cody, Johnson shows how his French Canadian background drove him to forge a voice that could contain his dualities and informed his unique outsider's vision of America. This revelatory portrait deepens our understanding of a man whose life and work hold an enduring place in both popular culture and literary history.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
  • Publish Date: Aug 27th, 2013
  • Pages: 512
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.40in - 5.70in - 1.10in - 0.90lb
  • EAN: 9780143123965
  • Categories: Literary FiguresMemoirsUnited States - 20th Century

More books to explore

Book Cover for: The Year of Magical Thinking: National Book Award Winner, Joan Didion
Book Cover for: Blue Nights: A Memoir, Joan Didion
Book Cover for: Let Me Tell You What I Mean: An Essay Collection, Joan Didion
Book Cover for: Create Dangerously: The Immigrant Artist at Work, Edwidge Danticat
Book Cover for: Air Traffic: A Memoir of Ambition and Manhood in America, Gregory Pardlo
Book Cover for: The Story of a Life, Konstantin Paustovsky
Book Cover for: Come Back in September: A Literary Education on West Sixty-Seventh Street, Manhattan, Darryl Pinckney
Book Cover for: Bukowski in a Sundress: Confessions from a Writing Life, Kim Addonizio
Book Cover for: Republic of Detours: How the New Deal Paid Broke Writers to Rediscover America, Scott Borchert
Book Cover for: Boy Kings of Texas: A Memoir, Domingo Martinez
Book Cover for: South and West: From a Notebook, Joan Didion
Book Cover for: Autobiography of Mark Twain, Volume 1: The Complete and Authoritative Edition Volume 10, Mark Twain
Book Cover for: The Unpunished Vice: A Life of Reading, Edmund White
Book Cover for: Hitch-22: A Memoir, Christopher Hitchens
Book Cover for: Never a Lovely So Real: The Life and Work of Nelson Algren, Colin Asher

About the Author

Joyce Johnson is the author of eight books, including the award-winning memoir Minor Characters, Missing Men, and Door Wide Open: A Beat Love Affair in Letters, 1957-1958 (with Jack Kerouac). She lives in New York City.

More books by Joyce Johnson

Book Cover for: Come and Join the Dance, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Minor Characters: A Beat Memoir, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: In the Night Café, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Oh! 900 Homemade Snack Recipes: The Best Homemade Snack Cookbook on Earth, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Bad Connections, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Lifetime Memories in Verse, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Oh! 1001 Homemade Dip Recipes: Best Homemade Dip Cookbook for Dummies, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Oh! 1001 Homemade Dip and Spread Recipes: An One-of-a-kind Homemade Dip and Spread Cookbook, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Unto Him: Songs of Praise and Encouragement, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Why Sales for Athletes: Lights Out and On Again, Nicholas Williams
Book Cover for: Bessie Head: The Road of Peace of Mind, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Do We Live In Two Worlds?, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Why Sales For College Students: Top Jobs! Top Earning$, Joyce Johnson

Praise for this book

"An intense and wonderful exploration into the mind of Jack Kerouac, the hard territory and brutal experiences that produced him and his own fierce determination to become a writer....Johnson succeeds in blowing apart many of the stereotypes of Kerouac as an author and as a man." --Dylan Foley, Chicago Tribune

"Spectacular...definitely the Kerouac book for our time...traces the birth of a literary genius and dispels many of the Kerouac myths: that he wrote from memory, not the imagination, and that he wrote spontaneously and without revising...Johnson knows how to create suspense and weave the complex lives of her characters into a narrative that rumbles along...her own voice is eloquent, her prose clear and crisp." --Jonah Raskin, San Francisco Chronicle

"A major new biography that traces the gradual emergence of the voice that came to define Kerouac's distinctive style of autobiographical fiction...Johnson redirects our focus to Kerouac's writing - an aspect that has been overshadowed by his legend." --Lauren Du Graf, The Daily Beast

"Johnson has wisely chosen to emphasize the part of Kerouac's life all but lost in the Kerouac legend: Behind the coast-to-coast craziness, the drug- and booze-inspired flights of mysticism, the Benzedrine-fueled writing sprees, a very serious writer was at work." --Bill Marvel, The Dallas Morning News


"[A] remarkable new biography...the final section of this book take on the urgency of a thriller reaching its climax. So closely does Johnson track Kerouac's evolution as a writer that one senses a breakthrough right around the corner." --John Freeman, Barnes and Noble review


"In The Voice is All, Johnson brilliantly and intimately gets beyond the Kerouac legend to the solitary soul of the man...she has infused Kerouac's work with excitement, struggle, desperation, and love." --Royal Young, Interviewmagazine.com


"Johnson, an award-winning memoirist in her own right, draws from her relationship with Kerouac, as well as Kerouac's private papers, for an unromanticized (but deeply personal) take on a man whose conflicted, roving essence continues to resonate." --Megan O'Grady, vogue.com


"A magnificent bildungsroman biography...Johnson has poured herself into the book in the way artists to works of the imagination...more rewarding than Johnson's inside storytelling are her insights into Kerouac's ambitions as a writer." --Mindy Aloff, The Virginia Quarterly Review


"Johnson proves herself to be a rigorous, knowledgeable, and penetrating biographer in this engrossing portrait of Kerouac as a divided soul...she offers exceptionally lucid coverage of his depression, alcoholism, and every significant relationship in his surging life...most valuable is Johnson's discerning analysis of what Kerouac hoped to achieve in his by-turns exalted and anguished transmutation of experience into literature." --Donna Seaman, ALA Booklist


"Johnson brings an outsider's perspective to this insightful study of how Kerouac found his voice as a writer...[she] excels in her colorful, candid assessment of the evolution of [Kerouac's] voice." --Publishers Weekly


"A triumph of scholarship...an exemplary biography of the Beat icon and his development as a writer...[Johnson] turns a laser-sharp focus on Kerouac's evolving ideas about language, fiction vs. truth and the role of the writer in his time...Johnson is a sensitive but admirably objective biographer." --Kirkus Reviews


"Johnson breaks new ground in this well-written account of Kerouac's early life...the portrait of Kerouac that emerges is one of a complicated individual, full of contradictions, who, above all else, was dedicated to his art...essential reading for anyone interested in a deeper understanding of Kerouac's life and work." --Library Journal