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You Can't Win (Paperback)

by Jack Black (Author), William S. Burroughs (Introduction)
4.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (37 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Product Description

The favorite book of William Burroughs. A journey into the hobo underworld, freight hopping around the still Wild West, becoming a highwayman and member of the yegg (criminal) brotherhood, getting hooked on opium, doing stints in jail or escaping, often with the assistance of crooked cops or judges. Our lost history revived.. With an introduction by Burroughs. A BookSense 77 selection.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 279 pages
  • Publisher: Nabat Books (April 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1902593022
  • ISBN-13: 978-1902593029
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 5.5 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (37 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #462,864 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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37 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (37 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most captivating books ever written, March 13, 2003
By Sandy Starr (United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
I first discovered Jack Black's `You Can't Win', as I suspect many readers did, when I found out that it was William S Burroughs' favourite book. Until I read it, though, I couldn't imagine just how big an influence it was on Burroughs - who drew upon its style, and the code of honour it describes, for the entirety of his writing career.

When you read Burroughs' foreword to this edition of `You Can't Win', it hits you that he didn't (as you might assume with a favourite book) reread the book regularly. Rather, he memorised the book as a boy, and then throughout his life `read' the version memorised in his own mind. Even the passages that Burroughs quotes in the foreword aren't word-for-word precise (I compared them with the text of the book proper), because they've been committed to myth and memory, and are recited in ritualistic fashion.

All of which aside, `You Can't Win' deserves to be known as more than just `the book that inspired Burroughs'. It's written in a plain, unsentimental style which has as much in common with the writing of Charles Bukowski as it does with the Beats - a style of writing which reached its apotheosis with `The Grass Arena', the harrowing autobiography of the British alcoholic vagrant John Healy. (Now, someone should teach a literature class comparing `You Can't Win' and `The Grass Arena' - THAT would be an inspiration.) What these writers have in common is that when you read them, you instantly think: `Now this is good, compelling, uncluttered prose.'

Many of those who have posted reviews below rightly praise Jack Black's memorable language and characterisation, which make `You Can't Win' into a kind of turn-of-the-century lexicon and encyclopaedia of the life of American thieves and hobos. But I was even more struck by Black's remarkable resolve, self-dependency and moral fortitude, and above all his categorical refusal to feel sorry for himself, or to let the reader feel sorry for him.

Three passages in the book in particular, all of which concern prison, are horrific - two passages in which Black is punished by flogging, and an absolutely unbearable passage in which he is tortured in a straitjacket by a sadistic prison warden. If these passages had been written by a lesser writer, I could not bear to read them. But Black takes the reader firmly by the hand, conveys what happened to him, and moves on.

Describing the first flogging: `It would not be fair to the reader for me to attempt a detailed description of this flogging.... If I could go away to some lonely, desolate spot and concentrate deeply enough I might manage to put myself in the flogging master's place and make a better job of reporting the matter. But that would entail a mental strain I hesitate to accept, and I doubt if the result would justify the effort.'

Describing the second flogging: `To make an unpleasant story short, I will say he beat me like a balky horse, and I took it like one - with my ears laid back and my teeth bared. All the philosophy and logic and clear reasoning I had got out of books and meditation in my two years were beaten out of me in 30 seconds, and I went out of that room foolishly hating everything a foot high.'

Describing being tortured in a straitjacket: `Every hour Cochrane came in and asked if I was ready to give up the hop. When I denied having it, he tightened me up some more and went away. The torture became maddening. Some time during the second day I rolled over to the wall and beat my forehead against it trying to knock myself out. Cochrane came in, saw what I was doing, and dragged me back to the middle of the cell. I hadn't strength enough left to roll back to the wall, so I stayed there and suffered.'

Black opens the book with a description of his own face, and fittingly enough, there is a photograph of him near the front of the book. Many times while reading `You Can't Win', I found myself flicking back to look at that careworn, yet amiable face, and picturing Black's exploits in my mind. The afterword to this edition, which outlines Black's life after the book was published, is equally fascinating - I was moved almost to tears to read that he simply vanished in 1932, and was strongly suspected of having tied weights to his feet and thrown himself into New York Harbour.

Of course, `You Can't Win' is a unique and priceless document of a bygone American era. But lest you find yourself feeling nostalgic for this way of life - as readers are prone to feel, whenever they read vivid descriptions of times before they were born, and as William S Burroughs is certainly guilty of feeling in his foreword - Black cautions us against precisely this kind of nostalgia (and ironically, uses an irresistibly romantic description of the past to do so):

`I'm not finding fault with these brave days of jungle music, synthetic liquor, and dimple-kneed maids, and anybody that thinks the world is going to the bowwows because of them ought to think back to San Francisco or any big city of 20 years ago - when train conductors steered suckers against the bunko men; when coppers located "work" for burglars and stalled them while they worked; when pickpockets paid the police so much a day for "exclusive privileges" and had to put a substitute "mob" in their district if they wanted to go out of town to a country fair for a week. Those were the days when there were saloons by the thousand; when the saloonkeeper ordered the police to pinch the Salvation Army for disturbing the peace by singing hymns in the street; when there were race tracks, gambling unrestricted, crooked prize fights; when there were cribs by the mile and hop joints by the score. These things may exist now, but if they do, I don't know where. I knew where they were then, and with plenty of money and leisure I did them all.'

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Jack Black was an unreconstructed yegg, and a real Johnson, November 17, 2006
An amazing little autobiography of a criminal from a forgotten time in american history. Jack Black was a burgler, safe-cracker, highwayman and petty thief from the late 1800s to early 1900s. His autobiography gives an amazing view to the underworld of those days; from the train-hopping Johnsons, bums and Yeggs of the hoboe community, to the chinese Opium houses, to the riotous wine-stews, to the straitjacket weilding jailors, to the characters; such as the righteous amazonian fence "Salt Chunk Mary" or the polished, erudite, ultra-smooth burgler "The Sanctimonious Kid." Heady stuff. And true to boot. I have a soft spot for criminal autobiographies of earlier eras. Of all the ones I've reviewed (or read in general), this one is far and away the most compelling. The world Jack Black evokes for us is radically different from anything we've ever heard of before. It is old world. It is modern. There is an entirely foreign and very complete kind of slang, intensely satisfying as a cultural object in itself. Jack Black himself was an amazing writer; his characterizations were powerful and full of flesh.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars How Burroughs Went Bad, June 3, 2000
By Rob Lightner (Occupied Seattle) - See all my reviews
Jack Black's tale of life as a small-time criminal in the turn-of-the-century West makes compelling reading today, even as it did for a young William Burroughs in the 1930s. Fans will read of the original Salt Chunk Mary, the Johnson family, the Sanctimonious Kid, and more, all characters so well-portrayed they must have been real. Black's prose is colorful without being overblown and he has quite an ear for dialogue (though his conversations with Chinese people are painful to read). Deeply sympathetic with the burglars, safecrackers, bunco men, and others who were his family for years, he shows most of them to have been honorable in their way, inspiring much of Burroughs' Western mythology in the process. Though he eventually settled down into a more secure life in San Francisco, Jack Black's heart belonged in the jungles outside town.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Turn of the 20th century underground
An autobiography of the life of a boxcar riding, hobo jungle drinking, opium smoking, free American. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Brian Zimmerman

5.0 out of 5 stars Nobody's read this book and everybody should.
Certainly everyone who reads any kind of mystery/crime/thriller books needs to pick this up immediately. Read more
Published 6 months ago by I-Am-Sam

5.0 out of 5 stars Well written and historically interesting.
Once I started reading this historical account of life as a hobo, grifter and thief from the turn of the last century, I just couldn't put it down. Read more
Published 9 months ago by E. Mariel Schooff

5.0 out of 5 stars beautiful life and piece of literature
as far as im concerned its the best piece of hobo literature out there. jack black is an amazing writer and it shows. Read more
Published 10 months ago by D. Anderson

5.0 out of 5 stars It's a man's, man's world
This is an amazing story that drags you into this guy's lonely world. Sexy, it ain't. It's a man's, man's world. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Michael Triplett

4.0 out of 5 stars You Can't Win
My son, who this book was purchased for, enjoyed this book very much. Thank you.
Published 16 months ago by Edward S. Taylor

5.0 out of 5 stars Breaking the Shackles
I thought this was a tip-top book. Blacky's adventures out West and in Canada around the turn of the century were very intruiging. Read more
Published 23 months ago by W. Prahl

5.0 out of 5 stars You Can't Win Won
A true story about a house burglar in the Twenties who escaped the law by riding the train to another town where he did the same thing again. It's Americana at it's best. Read more
Published on April 27, 2007 by Paul Alexander Moeller

5.0 out of 5 stars Explore the Hidden West in the 1800's
Rare is the book that so vividly captures the spirit of a time and a segment of society. This book does all that and more. Read more
Published on March 30, 2007 by Daniel Limbach

4.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating portrait of a bygone world
Black's account of his years as a hobo, burglar, and stick-up man in the West at the turn of the 19th century is chock full of nail-biting capers, memorable characters, and... Read more
Published on February 22, 2007 by Phil Myers

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