Additional information
Weight | 0.222 kg |
---|---|
Dimensions | 19.8 × 13 × 1.9 cm |
£9.99
Paperback | 256 pages
198 x 130 x 19 | 222g
A Lost Great American Master: meet Jack Kerouac’s inspiration in these heart-expanding tales of immigrant life in 1930s USA, introduced by superfan Stephen Fry.
JACK KEROUAC: ‘I loved him … He just got me’ARTHUR MILLER: ‘The first to let it all hang out and write like a child in wonderland.’KURT VONNEGUT: ‘Still the greatest.’JOSEPH HELLER: ‘My primary inspiration.’STEPHEN FRY: ‘One of the most underrated writers of the century.’I hadn’t had a haircut in forty days and forty nights, and I was beginning to look like several violinists out of work.
Depression-era San Francisco, home to the lost souls of many races: immigrants, struggling writers and heartsick adolescents, collecting in automats, nightschools, movies and barbershops, working in vineyards, telegram exchanges and as salesmen – and always revelling in being alive.
A bestseller on publication in 1934, The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze was the debut collection by the Pulitzer Prize-winning (and rejecting) Armenian-American writer William Saroyan. Fusing Whitman’s transcendence with the eccentric characterisation of Steinbeck and Salinger, and foreshadowing the rhapsodies of the Beats, his prose is a heart-expanding experience that intoxicates to this day.
Weight | 0.222 kg |
---|---|
Dimensions | 19.8 × 13 × 1.9 cm |
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