Jack Kerouac

About the Author

Jack Kerouac was born and raised in a French Canadian family in the Boston suburbs. His older brother’s sudden death at age nine, as well as his intense early experiences in the Catholic Church, left a mark on his life and work. A star football player in high school, Kerouac won an athletic scholarship to Columbia University but broke his leg in his first year and dropped out in his second. He met the other pioneering writers of the Beat Generation during this time, including Allen Ginsberg (who appears in The Dharma Bums as Alvah Goldbrook) and Neal Cassady (the central figure of Kerouac’s most well-known novel, On the Road). Kerouac then spent a year in the Merchant Marine, during which he wrote his first book, The Sea Is My Brother (which was not published until 2011). During World War II, he joined the Navy but was quickly discharged for psychiatric reasons. Kerouac lived on and off in New York for the next decade. In the process, he took several cross-country trips, married and divorced twice, and wrote more than 10 books, including On the Road. The events he recounts in The Dharma Bums occurred in the two years before he published On the Road in 1957. The book was an instant success, and Kerouac was soon identified as “the king of the beat generation.” He published The Dharma Bums the next year but was widely criticized for his interpretation of Buddhism. Over the next five years, he sold almost a dozen of the manuscripts he had written in the previous decade, and he became a fixture of American popular culture by the mid-1960s. However, during this period, Kerouac’s mother, sister, and close friend Neal Cassady all passed away. Kerouac himself followed in 1969, dying of an internal hemorrhage related to his lifelong alcoholism.

LitCharts guides for works by Jack Kerouac

Explore LitCharts literature guides for works by Jack Kerouac. Each guide includes a full summary, detailed analysis, and helpful resources for studying Jack Kerouac's writing.

On the Road

Sal Paradise recalls when he first met Dean Moriarty, who came to New York City from Colorado with his new wife Marylou and asked Sal to teach him how to write. Sal was struck by Dean’s mad enthus... view guide

The Dharma Bums

Ray Smith travels up the California coast toward San Francisco by hopping a freight train. He camps out on the beach and explains his philosophy, which is based in Buddhism: Ray is a modern-day bhi... view guide