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Beat Hotel : Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs & Gregory Corso à Paris, 1957-1963 (2001)

par Barry Miles

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Biography & Autobiography. Nonfiction. HTML:

The Beat Hotel has been closed for nearly forty years. But for a brief periodâ??from just after the publication of Howl in 1957 until the building was sold in 1963â??it was home to Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Gregory Corso, Brion Gysin, Peter Orlovsky, Harold Norse, and a host of other luminaries of the Beat Generation. Now, Barry Milesâ??acclaimed author of many books on the Beats and a personal acquaintance of many of themâ??vividly excavates this remarkable period and restores it to a historical picture that has, until now, been skewed in favor of the two coasts of America.
A cheap rooming house on the bohemian Left Bank, the hotel was inhabited mostly by writers and artists, and its communal atmosphere spurred the Beats to incredible heights of creativity. Its inhabitants followed the Howl obscenity trial, and they corresponded with Jack Kerouac as On the Road was taking off. There Ginsberg wrote â??Kaddish," â??To Aunt Rose," â??At Apollinaire's Grave," and â??The Lion for Real," and Corso developed the mature voice of The Happy Birthday of Death. The Beat Hotel is where the Cut-up method was invented, and where Burroughs finished and published Naked Lunch and the Cut-up novels. From a party where Ginsberg and Corso drunkenly accosted Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray, to an awestruck audience with Louis-Ferdinand Céline a year before he died; from a drug-addled party on a houseboat on the Seine with Errol Flynn and John Huston, to Burroughs's near arrest as a heroin dealer: mischief, inspiration, and madness followed the Beats wherever they went. Based on firsthand accounts from diaries, letters, and many original interviews, The Beat Hotel is an intimate look at a crucial period for some of the twentieth century's most endurin
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Burroughs biographer Barry Miles assiduously pulls together letters and fragments of recollection from various sources to create a historical narrative of the so-called Beat Hotel, the nameless, ramshackle Paris hotel where Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso and William S. Burroughs (among others) lived and created during the mid-twentieth century. Miles is a good writer and the book is engaging and well-paced, but from a purely human perspective the whole thing comes off as rather pathetic. Hey, these guys made history, so how pathetic could they have been, right? Well, how pathetic are any bunch of noisy drunks insisting that they're great poets, bending over backwards to draw attention to themselves (even mortifying W.H. Auden by trying to kiss the cuff of his pants, as Ginsberg and Corso did on a visit to London)? Because that's the mundane reality of the Beats: some American expatriates living in a dirty, rat-infested hotel with a shit-clogged Turkish toilet, drinking and getting laid and drinking and writing and drinking and generally behaving like asses. That in itself is not art. Yes, some of what was created during that period qualifies as literature (such as Ginsberg's "Kaddish"), but a lot of it falls well short of the mark. (And that includes Burroughs's celebrated Naked Lunch, which finally found a publisher not because it was a novel of such unparalleled brilliance that the world couldn't survive without it, but because it contained a handful of pornographic scenes and the publisher reckoned that it might be a moneymaker. Burroughs was a talented and occasionally even great writer, but Naked Lunch is not among his best work.)

It bears repeating that Miles is a fine writer and sets down nothing more or less than the truth in The Beat Hotel; my beef is with the sad debauchery of the author's man-baby subjects, not with the manner in which their story is told. If my analysis of them sounds harsh, it was intended to. I'm a fan of Burroughs--and Ginsberg, to a lesser extent--but not an uncritical one. No other literary movement has been so fundamentally defined by madness and murder (indeed, might never have come into being if not for madness and murder), nor seen its every masturbatory gesture exalted as high art. ( )
1 voter Jonathan_M | Jan 19, 2021 |
Ginsberg and friends lived in Paris during the Howl trail and in the immediate aftermath of Howl's international fame. Unfortunately, there is no index in this book, but there is a bibliography for further reading on Burroughs, Corso, and Ginsberg.
  HowlAtCLP | Oct 17, 2009 |
American literature > 20th century > History/and criticism/Beat generation/Burroughs, William S., 1914- > Homes and haunts/> France > Paris/Ginsberg, Allen, 1926- > Homes and haunts >/France > Paris/Authors, American > Homes and haunts > France/> Paris/Americans > France > Paris > History > 20th/century/Corso, Gregory > Homes and haunts > France >/Paris/Paris (France) > Intellectual life > 20th/Authors, American > 20th century > Biography/Beat generation > France > Paris
  Budzul | Jun 1, 2008 |
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Biography & Autobiography. Nonfiction. HTML:

The Beat Hotel has been closed for nearly forty years. But for a brief periodâ??from just after the publication of Howl in 1957 until the building was sold in 1963â??it was home to Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Gregory Corso, Brion Gysin, Peter Orlovsky, Harold Norse, and a host of other luminaries of the Beat Generation. Now, Barry Milesâ??acclaimed author of many books on the Beats and a personal acquaintance of many of themâ??vividly excavates this remarkable period and restores it to a historical picture that has, until now, been skewed in favor of the two coasts of America.
A cheap rooming house on the bohemian Left Bank, the hotel was inhabited mostly by writers and artists, and its communal atmosphere spurred the Beats to incredible heights of creativity. Its inhabitants followed the Howl obscenity trial, and they corresponded with Jack Kerouac as On the Road was taking off. There Ginsberg wrote â??Kaddish," â??To Aunt Rose," â??At Apollinaire's Grave," and â??The Lion for Real," and Corso developed the mature voice of The Happy Birthday of Death. The Beat Hotel is where the Cut-up method was invented, and where Burroughs finished and published Naked Lunch and the Cut-up novels. From a party where Ginsberg and Corso drunkenly accosted Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray, to an awestruck audience with Louis-Ferdinand Céline a year before he died; from a drug-addled party on a houseboat on the Seine with Errol Flynn and John Huston, to Burroughs's near arrest as a heroin dealer: mischief, inspiration, and madness followed the Beats wherever they went. Based on firsthand accounts from diaries, letters, and many original interviews, The Beat Hotel is an intimate look at a crucial period for some of the twentieth century's most endurin

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