In Jack Kerorock's 'Street', Saarland is a man who is tired of his life and his expectations. He is unsatisfied with sitting anymore, letting society condemn him in society as to who he should be and how he should act. This time Thrall met Dean Moriarty in his life, he saw him mature. Thrall does not necessarily know what he wants, but he knows that he needs to change. Sal knew that Dean taught him life and leads him to the great adventure of helping him find the world around him and what he wants, so Dean becomes his "master" It was.
Jack Kerouac's journey is an honest story about friendship, traveling the United States four times. A narrator is an ambitious novelist, Sal Paradise, who lives with his aunt in New Jersey. Sal's best friend is Dean Moriarty. Sal admires Dean's spacious denim style along with the ease of women and the joy of his life. In this book, Dean married many women, divorced, loved, and fascinated. Thrall is not very messy, but he is not ... the Dharma Bums Dharma cards of Jack Druma Bums are not too far from the basic explanation of his life. The majority of Kerouac's writing careers are trains from city to city, encounters with people, book writing, and poetry. He is one of the leading writers who lost generation, is a group of writers who are mainly urban poets, and incorporate the foundation of life and spiritual nuances into poetry. This book, The Dharma Bums is a window to the daily structure.
On Jack Kerouac 's novel "On the Road", he is talking about Sal Paradise and his experience on the road. Monkey crossed the off-road to San Francisco to meet university partners, but he went to meet his crazy friend Dean in Denver. Monkeys admire Dean's denim style, relationship with women, and his joy in life. They both journeyed through the United States. Thrall wants to go out because I think that there is great pressure in traditional life and I do not deserve it myself. The monkey took a long time from the university and traveled on a difficult-to-get road
When Sal first met Dean, we learned that Dean was arrested in Denver because he stole a car. However, Thrall saw such a criminal offense, as Dylal was seeking infinite energy and true happiness. In the whole novel, Dean's behavior is drawn empathetic. Keroroac believes that Dean's behavior is only a result of the pursuit of pure living and can not be held responsible regardless of whether it is considered criminal or irresponsible elsewhere in the world. As Monkey and Dean have seen, participating in this action is the only way to find the true meaning of life in the whole novel as they say. For Keroroac, the natural appetite of the body must take precedence over any legal or social derivations that have been devoted to it. To steal cars, drink drugs, and have sex with a small woman is just a male instinctive instinct seeking a real natural life.