Pic (novel): Difference between revisions
according to the book, Pic is ten years old, not six ... |
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'''''Pic''''' a [[1971]] novel by [[Jack Kerouac]]. |
'''''Pic''''' a [[1971]] novel by [[Jack Kerouac]]. |
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Pic is the story of a small child, [[Pictorial Review ]]Jackson, from [[North Carolina]]. When his grandfather, with whom he lives, dies, his older brother appears and plucks him from the disfunctional home of his aunt. They journey north to [[New York City]], |
Pic is the story of a small child, [[Pictorial Review ]]Jackson, from [[North Carolina]]. When his grandfather, with whom he lives, dies, his older brother appears and plucks him from the disfunctional home of his aunt. They journey north to [[New York City]], where Pic bears witness to the economic 'hard times' his brother is experiencing. After losing not one, but two jobs in one day, his brother sends his pregnant girlfriend to live with her sister in [[San Francisco]], as the two boys try to hitch and bum their way across the country. |
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It is written in a voice that is stereotypically black. Apparently Kerouac felt that this would be appropriate for his ten-year old protagonist. |
It is written in a voice that is stereotypically black. Apparently Kerouac felt that this would be appropriate for his ten-year old protagonist. |
Revision as of 12:12, 4 August 2007
Author | Jack Kerouac |
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Language | English |
Genre | Autobiographical novel |
Publisher | Grove Press |
Publication date | 1971 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
Pages | 120 pp |
ISBN | NA Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character |
Preceded by | Vanity of Duluoz (1968) |
Followed by | Scattered Poems (1971) |
Pic a 1971 novel by Jack Kerouac.
Pic is the story of a small child, Pictorial Review Jackson, from North Carolina. When his grandfather, with whom he lives, dies, his older brother appears and plucks him from the disfunctional home of his aunt. They journey north to New York City, where Pic bears witness to the economic 'hard times' his brother is experiencing. After losing not one, but two jobs in one day, his brother sends his pregnant girlfriend to live with her sister in San Francisco, as the two boys try to hitch and bum their way across the country.
It is written in a voice that is stereotypically black. Apparently Kerouac felt that this would be appropriate for his ten-year old protagonist.
It is out of print and currently available only as a single volume with either of Kerouac's novels Satori in Paris and The Subterraneans.
References
- 1971. Pic, ISBN 0-7043-1122-4
- 1988. Satori in Paris & Pic, ISBN 0-8021-3061-5