Going Solo: A Memoir: 1953–1958

Going Solo: A Memoir: 1953–1958 image
ISBN-10:

1943887500

ISBN-13:

9781943887507

Author(s): Minor, William
Edition: First Edition
Released: Jun 02, 2017
Format: Paperback, 438 pages
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Description:

At age seventeen, a boy graduates from high school and is admitted to the University of Michigan. There, both within but mostly outside the classroom, he makes troublesome discoveries about human nature, initiating a religious conversion. Challenged by Rilke’s statement “You must change your life,” he decides he must—but how cast off friends and family with whom he is all too familiar? At nineteen, he takes off on his own for New York City, attending an art school, Pratt Institute, and begins the dream of spending one’s lifetime as an artist. The year is 1955; he is exposed to the rich bond between jazz musicians (he plays jazz piano himself at the 456 Club in Brooklyn) and Abstract Expressionists. He befriends the most kindhearted, hospitable family he has ever known. A bright young woman introduces him to poets from Hart Crane to Baudelaire— and genuine love. Overwhelmed by too much “information” and insight (acquired too fast, too soon), he decides to take off with a fellow student for “the territory ahead” (one year before Jack Kerouac published On the Road): a cross-country hitchhiking adventure which, solely by chance (an injury working as a dishwasher at Big Jack’s Drive-in in Santa Monica, California) will lead him back to his hometown in Michigan—and reunion with a childhood love and a marital sojourn in the Garden of Eden (the island of Kauai in 1957). The couple, and a child, will return to San Francisco at the height of the Beat movement--and create a life together that will last for sixty years. It’s a nonfiction tale that spans significant cultural eras in American life, focused on the important discovery that you can be free only in a life you choose yourself. The book should appeal to a wide audience (anyone who’s experienced meaningful“coming of age,” which should be everyone!), a story told with considerable humor (in the spirit of Mark Twain) and lucid meaningful prose.












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