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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Only for the completist,
By taogoat (the mothership) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Heaven and Other Poems (Paperback)
This book isn't worth the money unless you absolutely must have everything Kerouac ever wrote. It's only got about 40 pages of poems, and if that's not bad enough, most all of the poems are published in other books.
"San Francisco Blues: Two Choruses," "Orizaba Blues: Four Choruses," and "Orlando Blues: 31st Chorus" can all be found in their entirety in Book of Blues, which is highly recommended if only because it contains the excellent "San Francisco Blues." "MacDougal Street Blues" and "My Gang" are in the wonderful & inconsistent collection Pomes All Sizes. The "Poems for Don Allen's Anthology" are choruses from "Mexico City Blues," chosen for Don Allen's anthology by Allen Ginsberg. The 20 pages of letters by Kerouac to Don Allen, while interesting, presumably can be found in Kerouac's Collected Letters. The letters also contain a "Biographical Resume" and "Biography" written by Kerouac (included in other books, I think--Good Blonde?), his statement on poetics and poetry found in Don Allen's anthology, and "Belief & Technique for Modern Prose: List of Essentials" found in the Beat Reader and Good Blonde. So, what does that leave? Not much. The only things I'm pretty sure can't be found anywhere else are the 1958 poems "A TV Poem" and "Heaven," totaling 10 pages, as well as a one-page cartoon entitled "Doctor Sax and the Deception of the Sea Shroud" drawn at Neal Cassady's house circa 1953-54. And the two poems aren't even that good. However, "Heaven" is very interesting in that it marks a clear shift between Kerouac's Buddhist period and his later alcoholic Catholicism, and it gives us insight into Kerouac's Christian beliefs. A couple interesting quotes from "Heaven": "The Church? Earth's dogmatic mistakes have nothing to do with Heaven" "For we all go back where we came from, God's Lit Brain, his transcendent Eye of Wisdom / And there's your bloody circle called samsara by the ignorant Buddhists, who will still be funny Masters up there, bless em." Oh, so now the Buddhists are ignorant? and this was written just a year or two after The Dharma Bums, wow. So anyways, this book has a good deal of interesting stuff -- poems, letters, autobiographies, statements -- but most of it can be found elsewhere. If you don't have Book of Blues, Mexico City Blues, and Pomes All Sizes yet, don't bother with this book. But if you gotta have it all, then by all means get it. Peace.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Writings of an icon - era bound but still interesting,
By
This review is from: Heaven and Other Poems (Paperback)
When I think of the beats Ginsburg, Whalen, Snyder, DiPrima, Ferlinghetti, Burroughs and Kerouac are the names that come to mind. This book pulls these and many other literary figures of the era together. For example, the title poem "Heaven" includes the lines "Phil Whalen will be / a blue cloud / anytime he wants".The poems in this volume include poems including a series of his blues poems - San Francisco Blues; MacDougal Street Blues; Orizaba Blues; Orlando Blues - and a letter on his theory of jazz poetry. It includes two short autobiographies and a series of letters between Kerouac and a publisher. The latter gives real insight into his writing: "I would like everybody in the world to tell his full life confession and tell it HIS OWN WAY" from a letter; or his essentials for modern prose which includes "telling the true story of the world in interior monologue" and " remove literary, grammatical and syntactical inhibition". The poems themselves show an interesting mixture of Catholic childhood, exposure to Buddhism, and an "in your face" telling it like it is. They are very much a product of their time which don't survive time well except as icons of their time - and some interesting seeds for era-specific equivalents for our time. I highly recommend the book as a reminder of the beats and what they stood for (and against).
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