I love this kind of biography--where the people in a central figure's life relate their piece of the elephant. In the case of Kerouac, whose ouevre is really a crafted autobiography, the opportunity to hear direct from the actual characters their impression of their friend and their take on the actual events that Kerouac uses in his great novels--it's the perfect placement of a third mirror, completing the experience of Kerouac's work, one ongoing novel featuring an extended group of his remarkable friends. (A useful sidebar to Jack's Book, and indeed, Kerouac as a whole, is a list on Beat dot com, telling us Who's Who in Kerouac--as he changes everybody's name but little else.)
We hear from everybody--the authors Barry Gifford and Lawrence Lee have found interviews and statements from the vast extended constellation of Kerouac's friends, including its major characters--Neal Cassady and Allen Ginzberg, William Burroughs, Gary Snyder and the San Francisco gang, Gregory Corso, Lew Welch and Phillip Whalen, Ferlinghetti--and less famous but more intimate friends, childhood friends. Plus the women, finally heard from-- including Luanne, Neal's first wife (Mary Lou in On the Road) and Carolyn, his second, (the beautiful Camille in OTR) often shared with Kerouac, Lenore Kandel (Romana Swartz in Dharma Bums) and even Aline Lee (Mardou Fox in The Subterraneans). A more straightforward account of the writer's sexuality and the Beat communality around just about everything, his complex relationship/dependence on his mother. The early New York scene, the Denver one, the San Francisco Beats.
I've been listening to this rather than reading on the page when I stumbled on it on my library's Libby audiobooks site, and loving it this way, it gives you such a feel for these living people... Then I go back to On the Road and because I know these people now, have a clearer idea of what had been happening from other people's point of view, it gives me that more appreciation for Kerouac's artistry, and the complexity of the man. What's in and what's not, why he made his mother his aunt and so forth. Essential piece of Kerouaciana.