Poetry News

Lost Letter That Inspired 'On the Road': FOUND!

Originally Published: November 25, 2014

Wow! Breaking news! NPR reports that a long-lost letter Neal Cassady wrote to Jack Kerouac, which inspired On the Road, has been re-discovered! The eighteen-page letter, written by Neal Cassady and sent to Jack Kerouac, tells the story of a wild and crazy weekend spent with a one Joan Anderson. Founding editor of the Beat Museum in San Francisco, Jerry Cimino, calls this letter "the holy grail of the Beat Generation" because, among other things, it provoked a major shift in Kerouac's writing style. More:

When Jack Kerouac's On the Road was first published in 1957 no one had ever seen anything quite like it. As it turns out, that stream of consciousness style that Kerouac made famous owes a huge debt to a letter written by his friend Neal Cassady. Among Kerouac scholars and fans it became known as the "Joan Anderson letter." It was missing for 65 years, but it has been found and will be auctioned next month.

Joe Maddalena, CEO of the auction house Profiles in History, first heard of the letter about a year ago. A colleague told him about "the Joan Anderson letter," which she called the greatest literary discovery of the 21st century: "I consider myself a pretty smart guy — well-read, well-educated — and I'm like ... who the heck is Joan Anderson?" Maddalena admits.

Anderson was a woman Cassady spent a wild weekend with back in 1950. He wrote about it to his friend Kerouac in an 18-page, single-spaced, stream of consciousness letter.

"In the Beat world we've always referred to the Joan Anderson letter as the holy grail of the Beat Generation," says Jerry Cimino, founding director of the Beat Museum in San Francisco. He says this is the letter that led Kerouac to completely change his writing style.

"Prior to this, Kerouac had been writing in a relatively standard fashion for that time," Cimino explains. "And when he got this letter from Neal ... it just knocked his socks off. He said, 'Wow, look at how Neal is writing' — it's so spontaneous; it's so confessional. And Jack Kerouac adapted that style from Neal Cassady's letter and used it in the writing of his new novel, which was called On The Road, which of course became his best-seller." [...]

Learn more at NPR and get ready for some inspiration!