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Dharma Bums

Dharma Bums

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Kerouac's epitome of contentment
Review: Dharma Bums is Jack Kerouac at his height of spirituality and utter happiness. This book, with a plot more enticing than On the Road but no less heartfelt, encourages readers to expand their own views of self and the universe while enjoying Kerouac's own interpretations of life and his coming Buddahood.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The book that initiated my addiction to beat
Review: As a Californian, frequenter of the Sierra Nevadas, as well as a college student who obsesses over fine American Literature, I found this work to be perhaps the most well written piece of beat fiction i've read. Contrary to popular belief, I feel this is a much more mature and insightful piece than "On the Road" (not to take anything from the brilliance of Kerouac's breakthrough work) and should be held in reverence by literature and philosophy enthusiasts across the globe. Japhy Ryder's Buddha representation, as well as Kerouac's struggle to incorporate his new discovery of traditional buddhism with his original Catholic upbringing are representative of the Western Frontier of Eastern Thought, which is becoming more popular even today, thanks to the likes of Jack Kerouac. Bravo!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The second best, about buddism, Jack when he's happy!!
Review: The Dharma Bums is possibly Kerouac's second best novel, it focuses on his discovery of Buddism as the Cassady character of dean Moriarty is replace by Gary Shyder's Japhy Ryder who helps and older Kerouac discover the mountains with its landscape and animal life, he teaches Kerouac about the simplicity of life which he hankered after.For those who like to see Kerouac happy with life rather thandepressed and looking back to better days this is the book you have to read

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Eeeha! That dharmy-boy Jack shore can smith them words.
Review: Eeeha! That dharmy-boy Jack shore can smith them words.  They bounce and spin, leap and unfurl in a cacophony of tremulous abandon in your mind's ear.


The pleasure in reading Kerouac is that he is such a remarkably good, wonderful person and he is so joyous and full of zealotry and surprise.  And he loves everyone, unconditionally.  But there is not a hint of treacle; it is all vividly authentic but awash in kindness.


THE DHARMA BUMS was written in the late 50s, and was a quick follow up to Kerouac's ground-breaking best-seller ON THE ROAD.  Both are less experimental than others of Kerouac's works, but are jaunty displays of Kerouac's famed spontaneous prose.


As with most of Kerouac's work, the novel is written in first person and closely follows events in Kerouac's life, with the identities of his real-life beat friends disguised by pseudonyms (at the insistence of his publisher).


The book begins in southern California in 1955 with Ray Smith [Jack] struggling to hop a fast train to San Francisco.  He arrives in The City after overcoming some difficulties and meeting a good-hearted hobo.  Once in the city, there is a quick chapter--not calling much attention to itself--about Ray's attendance at a poetry reading, which is noteworthy in that it is a fictionalized account of the most famous poetry reading of all time:  when Allan Ginsberg first read "Howl."  [In the novel the poet is named Alvah Goodbook and his poem is titled "Wail."]


Quickly, though, Ray [and the reader] meets the central character of the book, Japhy Ryder.  [It is fun to know that Japhy is based on the Pulitzer-winning poet Gary Snyder and the project Japhy/Gary is up to at the beginning of the novel is to draft the first Chinese-to-English translation of Han Shan's "Cold Mountain." Shan's epic poem is the inspiration of the current best-selling novel of the same name, set during the Civil War.]  Ryder is the ultimate, ebullient frees!pirit who whisks Ray off on an adventure, a climb up the Matterhorn (a peak just outside the current-day borders of Yosemite National Monument).  At all times, Japhy and Ray engage in happy dharma banter, swapping tales and lessons learned.  And back at Japhy's shack of a home there are orgies, jazz and meditation, exceptionally tasty plates of beans and bottles of cheap ruby-red port.


The book continues with fascinating similar events, all written in a lusty, swashbuckling style, full of dharma and comradery.  At the novel's conclusion, a final mountain is climbed--both figuratively and literally--and the experience left me fully satisfied.


Unlike almost all other novels, DHARMA BUMS and others of Kerouac's tales are not driven by a careful, classic  plotline.  There is no achy tragedy that you read your way into the heart of and then hope for a nifty, surprising conclusion.  The book barrels forward from the lust-for-life of its characters and the supreme genius of Kerouac at his craft of threading words.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: I took too long to read this, but glad I did
Review: I don't usually appreciate rambling, hundred-word sentences, but somehow that works in Dharma Bums. The free-wheeling sentence structure is dense with description of the land Ray Smith traverses, parties, wine-drinking, poetry-reciting sessions, and how all that ties in with his particular brand of Buddhism. I was never sure where they were going to go next. The payoff for me was near the end, where he heads up to Washington state, ultimately arriving at his fire lookout on remote Desolation Peak in the North Cascades. That's not far from my house, and though much has changed since the '50s, a lot of his description of the trip from Seattle up to the mountain still rings true today. So that's my favorite part of the book, but the whole thing was enjoyable for me. Just don't look for a plot to drive this thing.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unforgettable, Inspirational Lyricism
Review: This was a truly astounding book. I have read "On the Road," and consider this to be the better one. Its beautiful, almost mythical descriptions of the California mountains gave me vivid pictures I will never forget, and the Buddhist philosophies Kerouac talks about really opened my eyes. This is a profound book that I consider one of the top five I have ever read. It's characters are intriguing, the journey is freedom itself, and it hits you in your soul.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An exceptional tale of awakening and new visions.
Review: Perspective's of america,the west and a spiritual journey of sorts. Personal favorites of the story are the descriptions of Jack and his friend as they dance down a rock field and the advice of/don't worry if you fall,we are going down and you will still get where your'e going/let the waters flow and enjoy a beautiful tale with subtle catholic buddhist leanings.aza38

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Kerouac no literary giant, an American treasure
Review: Kerouac, while not a writer of of any profound depth, must be considered nevertheless a treasure in the annals of American letters. His novels provide a brilliant witness-lens of manifold perspective. The freshness of his expression, the early sallies into nascent american buddhism, and his disilllusioned, bemused and cynical observance of the turmoil and rebellion of midcentury culture are immutable and altogether without peer. Anyone interested in counterculture or our culture in general is recommended to this finest of Kerouac's titles.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: "Easy Rider" meets "Bar Fly", meets "Into the Wild"....
Review: A somewhat sad story...The protagonist, a dis-spirited, wistful, melancholy soul, who's "haddit" with middleclass, American society (who hasn't) and - with constant refills of his huge, bottomless wine goblet - hits the Highroad, full of Zen, Buddha, etc...I was just waiting for this guys liver to simply explode from his body...Reminded me a bit of "Catcher in the Rye" (odd), "Into the Wild", "Easy Rider" and, in a more odd way, Hongo's "Volcano"...This theme of restlessness, discontent, (self?) dissatisfaction...And never quite finding a Home. Never - even with the aid of horrific amounts of booze - not quite Settling In. I wonder about Kerouac's State of Being - minus the alcohol... Sad, not triumphant, story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Close to Real Matter!
Review: The sense of nature Kerouac captured in this book is an important message in this work-shop-consume world. And he conveys so much appetite for life! I especially enjoyed the Gary Snyder character: "The closer you get to real matter...(rocks, mountains, etc.) the more spiritual the world is." I"M READING IT AGAIN!


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