"The centerpiece of all [Kerouac's] novels."--The Washington Post
Originally written in 1951-1952, Visions of Cody was an underground classic by the time it was finally published in 1972, three years after Kerouac's death. Utilizing a radical, experimental form ("the New Journalism fifteen years early," as Dennis McNally noted in Desolate Angel), Kerouac examines his own New York life in a collection of colorful stream-of-consciousness essays. Always transfixed by Neal Cassady--here named Cody Pomeray--along with Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs, Kerouac also explores the feelings he had for a man who inspired much of his work.
Transcribing taped conversations between members of their group as they took drugs and drank, Visions of Cody reveals an intimate portrait of people caught up in destructive relationships with substances, and one another, capturing the members of the Beat Generation in the years before any label had been affixed to them.
Rudy Rucker is a cyberpunk writer with a checkered past. Ware Tetralogy, Complete Stories, and Juicy Ghosts. I'm staying on X for now.
Reading a Kindle of Jack Kerouac's VISIONS OF CODY, kind of a supplement to ON THE ROAD. I'd read VofC Part 2 (transcribed tapes of Jack and Neal Cassady) i 1986. Used that style for my Emul in WETWARE. Interesting old review of VofC in NY Times. https://t.co/pEGz0xDPdU https://t.co/tl7OaCcLtg
Steve Silberman is a science writer.
Neal Cassady, Beat muse of Jack Kerouac's novels, Allen Ginsberg's poetry, and @GratefulDead's "The Other One," was born OTD in 1926. This is my very favorite passage of Kerouac ever, from the overlooked "Visions of Cody," inspired by Neal. Sorry for the small print. https://t.co/qhT05qPGos
"Visions of Cody is [Kerouac's] greatest book, according to his own opinion, and its music is testimony to [his] verbal inventiveness and virtuosity . . . the range and variation of style within his remarkably growing bookshelf is just as remarkable . . . there is a grace, a majesty, and a tenderness to his language . . . both the inspiration and the content of this literature is of an intuitive, emotional, and mystical nature." --The Village Voice
"The most sincere and holy writing I know of our age." --Allen Ginsburg