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  1. Joan Haverty Kerouac (1931– May 15, 1990), born Joan Virginia Haverty, was the second wife of writer Jack Kerouac and the author of an autobiography, Nobody's Wife: The Smart Aleck and the King of the Beats. Joan Kerouac's autobiography, which existed only in manuscript form when she died, appeared in book form in 2000 after the Kerouacs' only child, Jan Kerouac, her half-brother, David, and ...

  2. Born Joan Haverty, Joan took the married name Kerouac in 1950. Later there was yet another married name. Then at some point, Joan became tired of carrying any man’s name, including her father’s. Joan Stuart was a name she adopted in honor of her own independence. It wasn’t any family’s name, but it had a sound she liked.

  3. 7 de jun. de 2021 · Gostaríamos de exibir a descriçãoaqui, mas o site que você está não nos permite.

  4. Jan Kerouac im Jahre 1983 in Eugene, Oregon. Jan Kerouac, eigentlich Janet Michelle Kerouac (* 16.Februar 1952 in Albany, New York; † 5. Juni 1996 in Albuquerque, New Mexico) war eine US-amerikanische Schriftstellerin und die einzige Tochter von Jack Kerouac, einem der wichtigsten Vertreter der Beat Generation, und Joan Haverty Kerouac, seiner zweiten Ehefrau.

  5. 21 de abr. de 2019 · In Cannastra’s New York Times obituary and Al Aronowitz’s 1961 New York Post profile, it’s listed as 165 West 25th Street. At the first big Kerouac symposium at Salem State College in 1973, Allen said it was on 23rd Street. Joyce Johnson calls it 121 West 21st in her Voice Is All book.

  6. Joan Haverty Kerouac Stuart died on May 15, 1990, in Eugene. Reviewer David Adox said in The New York Times that Nobody's Wife "... shows the fragile and insecure side of [Jack] Kerouac, and interweaves details of Kerouac's life with the story of a young, smart and sensitive woman coming of age in the 1950s."

  7. 27 de nov. de 2013 · by Mark Terrill. Neither scholarly tome nor critical analysis, Edie Kerouac-Parker’s new memoir is a warm, intimate, and colorful portrait of the embryonic journey of Jack Kerouac, whose seminal novel On the Road celebrates its 50th anniversary this year. You’ll Be Okay is thus a timely contribution to the ongoing reassessment of Kerouac ...