Today, 10 facts about Jack Kerouac, who was born on this date in 1922.
He was born in Lowell, Massachusetts and given the name Jean-Louis Lebris de Kerouac. His father was an insurance salesman. He claimed that his family were originally from Ireland, but migrated to Cornwall and that was the origin of the name – Kernewek, meaning the Cornish language. Or it might have been a Celtic name meaning "language of the water". His ancestors would later flee to France and there was a baron among them: Baron François Louis Alexandre Lebris de Kerouac.
His first language was French, not English. He learned to speak English when he was six and had a French accent until his late teens.
When he was four, his older brother Gerard died of rheumatic fever, aged nine. Jack believed that his brother became his guardian angel and was the inspiration for his book, Visions of Gerard.
His best friend at school was called Sebastian Sampas, who shared his love of literature and theatre. It was Sampas who encouraged Jack to join the “Scribbler’s Club” at school, so could be responsible for getting him into writing. Sampas was killed during World War II. His sister Stella became Jack’s third wife in 1966.
Jack served as a merchant mariner during the war. He served on the SS Dorchester before its maiden voyage. He wasn’t, however, on the ship when it was sunk during a Submarine attack while crossing the Atlantic. Kerouac joined the Navy Reserves, but military life really wasn’t for him and he only lasted eight days in active service before being honourably discharged on psychiatric grounds. He wrote his first novel at this time, called The Sea Is My Brother, but it wasn’t published until 40 years after he died.
One of his friends, Lucien Carr, killed a man called David Kammerer, who Carr claimed was gay and had made advances to him. He asked Kerouac and fellow author William S Burroughs to help him dispose of the body which resulted in Kerouac being arrested as a material witness. He appealed to his girlfriend Edie Parker to get her family to post bail. She said she would on condition that he married her and got a job to pay back the loan. He kept his promise, but the marriage didn’t last.
His second wife was Joan Haverty, with whom he had a daughter, but by the time the child was born they had already separated. Kerouac denied paternity and refused to pay child support.
He liked to incorporate haiku into his works. Fellow Beat Poet Allen Ginsberg said of him, “He’s the only one in the United States who knows how to write haiku… he talks that way, thinks that way.” Kerouac was also an artist and would paint people he met, having painted his first self portrait at the age of nine.
Despite being famous for writing a book called On the Road, he never learned to drive and envied people who had the skill.
The character Hank in David Cronenberg's 1991 film Naked Lunch is based on Kerouac. He also has a crater on Mercury named after him.
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