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- In the original manuscript, Moriarty was named Cassady, and although the name had been changed by publication, there is no doubt that Neal Cassady was the real Dean Moriarty.
allthatsinteresting.com/neal-cassadyNeal Cassady, The Man Who Inspired Jack Kerouac's "On The Road"
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Neal Leon Cassady (February 8, 1926 – February 4, 1968) was a major figure of the Beat Generation of the 1950s and the psychedelic and counterculture movements of the 1960s. Cassady published only two short fragments of prose in his lifetime, but exerted considerable intellectual and stylistic influence through his conversation and ...
Mar 11, 2022 · While Cassady may have been a genius—or just a genie—of American experience, Kerouac was a genius of words. So Neal didn’t write (much) about Jack; Jack wrote about Neal.
Nov 22, 1990 · When Cassady finally names himself, in a letter written to his wife from prison, as “Neal, the REAL heel,” one can only nod one’s head in dazed agreement.
- David Whiteis
Apr 25, 2018 · He was also the main inspiration for Dean Moriarty the main character of Kerouac’s seminal work On the Road. In the original manuscript, Moriarty was named Cassady, and although the name had been changed by publication, there is no doubt that Neal Cassady was the real Dean Moriarty.
Nov 25, 2014 · November 25, 2014. Share: The famous “Joan Anderson” letter from Neal Cassady to Jack Kerouac has been found in Southern California. Cassady apparently wrote the letter to Kerouac in a...
Sep 5, 2017 · In this initial version, Kerouac’s travel buddy is more strongly based on fellow Beat Lucien Carr than on Neal Cassady, the eventual model for Dean Moriarty.
Oct 5, 2018 · “[F]ast, mad, confessional, completely serious,” Kerouac called Cassady in a 1968 Paris Review interview; he is remembered as the inspiration for Dean Moriarty, the central character in Kerouac’s 1957 breakthrough novel On the Road. And yet, as true as this is, it is perhaps not true enough. Yes, Cassady was a muse of sorts.