Satori in Paris

Satori in Paris is a 1966 novella by American novelist and poet Jack Kerouac.[1][2] It is a short, autobiographical tale of Kerouac's trip to Paris, then Brittany, to research his genealogy. Kerouac relates his trip in a tumbledown fashion as a lonesome traveler. Little is said about the research that he does, and much more about his interactions with the French people he meets.

Satori in Paris
First edition cover
AuthorJack Kerouac
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
PublisherGrove Press
Publication date
1966
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages118 pp
Preceded byDesolation Angels
(1965) 
Followed byVanity of Duluoz
(1968) 

Editions

  • 1966. Satori in Paris, ISBN 0-394-17437-2
  • 1982. Satori in Paris, Granada Publishing, ISBN 0-586-05545-2
  • 1988. Satori in Paris & Pic, ISBN 0-8021-3061-5
  • 1991. Satori in Paris, Flamingo, ISBN 0-586-09118-1
gollark: Yes, the universe is quite big.
gollark: Just expand more.
gollark: And/or coordination problems.
gollark: The hunger thing is just that there's enough food, but distribution is hard, and nobody actually cares much about faraway starving people.
gollark: Yes, but death is very bad.

References

  1. Sarris, Andrew (1967). "More Babbitt Than Beatnik". nytimes.com. Retrieved 2019-03-12.
  2. "Satori in Paris and Pic". Grove Atlantic.


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