Showing posts with label the beats a graphic history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the beats a graphic history. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Daily Thoughts 6/3/2009


Dante Gabriel Rossetti reading proofs of Sonnets and Ballads to Theodore Watts Dunton in the drawing room at 16 Cheyne Walk, London; gouache, 1882


Daily Thoughts 6/3/2009

For Jack Kerouac

I'll become a sailor

Write my way on a merchant steamer

Then wander along roads


I have started reading The Beats A Graphic History, a considerable amount of the text is by Harvey Pekar, there are even a few pictures of Harvey talking in the stories, and the cover art is by Ed Piskor.

For some reason, I can't turn off the bold text in the Blogger editor right now.

There it is starting to work again.

For Kenneth Rexroth

Rexroth where are you?

A candle that others do not see

A light in the corner

The Beats A Graphic History was on the New York Times bestseller list for graphic novels. It is interesting if not a bit disturbing. It tells the stories of the major beat writers; Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs, and Jack Kerouac. There are also numerous other people covered like Robert Creely, Diane Di Prima, Kenneth Rexroth, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and others.

The book does not just cover the lives of the writers, it also includes the story of City Lights Bookstore in San Francisco, and a bit on art and music (especially jazz poetry) that coexisted with poetry and writing. There is also a short section on women and the beats. It even mentions Bob Kaufman my favorite beat poet in a line or two here and there.

The stories are often graphic, violent, and disturbing. They are not expurgated. They often tell tales of people who are lost, wandering, doing drugs, taking risks, and living on the wilder side of life. Many of the biographies are set in Greenwich Village in Manhattan and San Francisco.

The graphic novel does not attempt to criticize the writers writing. It is more focused on what happened in their lives. The art in the graphic novel very much matches the styles. It represents some of the better comics lit artists. Some of the artists who drew the stories are interesting. Ed Piskor drew the cover. A few of the artists are Lance Tooks, Jay Kinney, and Peter Kuper.

The graphic novel was the kind of book you can read in an afternoon. I read it on the train.


Monday, June 1, 2009

Daily Thoughts 6/1/2009

Portrait of Walter Scott (1771 - 1832), novelist and poet, oil on canvas, author of Ivanhoe.


Daily Thoughts 6/1/2009

Today is another day like most others. I spent much of this morning catching up on my reading in Library Journal, Publishers Weekly, Kirkus Reviews, and Booklist. I also placed some orders for fiction in my cart for Baker and Taylor. There were a few books which I had seen at Book Expo America which I thought we should get, so I suggested they be ordered. One of them is Abraham Obama from Last Gasp. I thought that there might be readership for this. It is fairly controversial. http://www.lastgasp.com/d/34587/

I am waiting for my box from the convention to come in. It should be interesting when it gets here. The shifting of the 700s went pretty well. Things are starting to come into place a little better. I still have to do more weeding there.

There were a few books which I plan on reading waiting for me, The Beats A Graphic History Edited by Paul Buhle and WWW: Wake by Robert J. Sawyer. Robert J. Sawyer has won the Hugo and Nebula Awards for his previous work.

I read some more of The Toyota Way on the way home. It is very meticulous and detailed. The book is focused on improving processes in a company as well as eliminating waste. The author is describing a very hands on approach where the managers are constantly on the shop floor and looking at ways to improve things. At times it seems a little bit overbearing. The book does not have a lot of complex diagrams in it. There is a real focus on trying to explain things clearly. I rather like the idea of trying to condense reports onto a single piece of paper. My boss insists we keep our monthly reports to a single page.