New Whizz Bang Edition Of Kerouac’s On The Road

As an English schoolboy this book opened up a few options, especially allowing a young mind to imagine? an America that wasn’t all buddy cop shows, appalling golfing trousers and Ronald Reagan..


So i’m not sure turning the latest edition into something that sounds like the bastard offspring of wikipedia and google maps really works for HOB. We do like to use our imagination when reading.

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Surprisingly no link to free mp3 downloads to the works of George Shearing and other be-bop giants so beloved by Kerouac

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I’m sure Burroughs would have approved of the technology though, as long as a few viruses get involved at some stage of the proceedings.

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We’ll leave you to decide on this.

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I presume it’s not long before we’ll be able to walk and talk with Chaucer’s avatar pilgrims

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Persona Non Data report

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Amplified Version of Kerouac’s On The Road

http://personanondata.blogspot.com/2011/06/amplified-version-of-kerouacs-on-road.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Personanondata+%28PersonaNonData%29

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Penguin releases “amplified iPad version” of Kerouac’s On The Road (Apple Store) and the title is covered by the NY Times Paper Cuts blog:
The ?amplified edition? of ?On the Road,? released today by Penguin Classics, certainly comes tricked out with more fancy bells and whistles than a BMW M5. It includes the full text of the novel, of course, with expandable marginal notes giving historical and biographical background. An interactive map traces Kerouac?s three real-life cross-country road trips, with links to relevant passages from the novel. There are never-before-seen photos, rare audio clips of Kerouac reading from an early draft, previously unreleased documents from his publisher?s archive, and a slide show of international covers showing how the book has been marketed from Argentina to Ukraine to China.

The app?s collection of documents from the archives of Viking, which published the original hardcover, gives insight into the intense corporate efforts to market this most freewheeling of American novels ? which surely holds lessons for those selling souped-up e-books today. Here, you find an exchange of letters between Kerouac and his editor, Malcolm Cowley, about how to deal with obscenity issues, as well as a facsimile of a previously unreleased internal memorandum saying the book had great fascination and sales potential despite not being ?a great or even a likeable book.? (That last part was penciled out.) There?s also Kerouac?s own sketch for an ?appealing commercial cover,? showing all the cities visited in the novel cheek by jowl along a single straight road, under the heading ?A Modern Prose Novel by John Kerouac.?