The Lowell Review 2022

Page 168

2022

Commemorating Kerouac: An Interview (1998)

I first met Paul Marion not long after the dedication of the Kerouac Commemorative. I was living in Boston at the time and read his name in the Boston Globe, in their reporting on the years-long movement in Lowell to honor Jack Kerouac with a public monument. I had been reading Kerouac for twenty years at that time, but I had never been to Lowell. I felt like I needed a guide to point me in the right direction. I got Paul’s phone number from “Directory Assistance” and called him cold, to tell him of my interest in photographing “Kerouac places” in Lowell, and to ask his help in finding whatever locales still existed in the city from Kerouac’s time. Paul was open to meeting with me, and we sat down one afternoon in a Greek restaurant on Market Street. I remember him telling me, “Growing up here and being a poet, Kerouac—as a creative influence—is a piano on your back, almost overwhelming. You can’t write anything about this place without taking him into consideration.” Born in 1954, Paul’s first home was in the Centralville section of Lowell, around the corner from Kerouac’s birthplace. The author was in New York then, but sometimes made nostalgic visits to wander around his old neighborhoods. I used to joke that Kerouac probably walked past Paul in his baby carriage, throwing a shade that predetermined the rest of his life. When we met, Paul had two books of poetry (Strong Place and Middle Distance) and his own small publishing operation—Loom Press, which is still in existence, and thriving, in 2021. He gave me copies of his books, and I went straight to a poem with an obvious Kerouac connection, “Big Sur,” in Middle Distance. Kerouac-influenced, it was; but not Kerouac-dominated. The poem echoed the title of one of Jack’s books, but it was not about California, it was about the Kerouac Commemorative. Paul clearly had his own voice, even then. “Kerouac’s back in the news”— it began . . . his hometown elected his art. There’ll be a fresh green lawn with his breath set in polished red-brown stones that will sing to those come to find him. I was certainly one of “those come.” From late 1988 until the fall of 1993, I visited Lowell regularly, walking along the walls of the mills with my cameras, praying for good photo-luck at the Grotto, climbing over the rocks under the Moody Street bridge, shooting pool at the Pawtucketville Social Club, even getting to meet Jack’s old high school girlfriend, Mary Carney, still living in the same house on the bank of the Concord River where Kerouac wooed her. In 1989, on the twentieth anniversary of his passing, I published my first photo-essay of 154

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John Suiter & Paul Marion Commemorating Kerouac: An Interview (1998

28min
pages 168-184

Contributors

18min
pages 185-196

Dave DeInnocentis Marin County Satori

7min
pages 165-167

Joylyn Ndungu Equilibrium

1min
page 164

Music Passions as Writer’s Centenary Is Reached

20min
pages 154-161

El Habib Louai Two Poems

1min
pages 162-163

Janet Egan Saturday Morning, Reading ‘Howl’

1min
page 152

Billy Collins Lowell, Mass

1min
page 153

Mike McCormick Stumbling Upon The Town and the City

7min
pages 149-151

Emilie-Noelle Provost The Standing Approach

9min
pages 142-148

Sean Casey Tom Brady

1min
page 141

Fred Woods The Basketball Is Round

1min
page 140

Patricia Cantwell Kintsugi (A Radio Drama

11min
pages 112-120

Michael Steffen Arturo Gets Up

1min
pages 136-137

Charles Gargiulo Marvelous Marvin Hagler and the Godfather

5min
pages 138-139

David R. Surette Favors: A Novel (an excerpt

14min
pages 121-126

Neil Miller How a Kid from the East Coast Became a Diamondbacks Fan

10min
pages 127-130

Sarah Alcott Anderson Caution

1min
page 134

Carl Little A Hiker I Know

1min
page 135

Bob Hodge Our Visit with Bernd

6min
pages 131-133

David Daniel Remembering a Friendship: Robert W. Whitaker, III (Nov. 9, 1950 – Sept. 16, 2019

8min
pages 108-111

Ann Fox Chandonnet A Postcard from Sandburg’s Cellar

1min
pages 106-107

Sheila Eppolito Hearing Things Differently

3min
pages 101-102

Joan Ratcliffe The Incessant

10min
pages 91-94

John Struloeff The Work of a Genius

6min
pages 103-105

Meg Smith Ducks in Heaven

1min
page 77

Susan April Another Turn

3min
pages 95-96

Crowdsourcing the Storm Boards

8min
pages 85-90

Stephen O’Connor A Man You Don’t Meet Every Day

11min
pages 97-100

El Habib Louai Growing on a Hog Farm on the Outskirts of Casablanca

1min
pages 81-84

Alfred Bouchard Patched Together in the Manner of Dreams

1min
page 76

Dairena Ní Chinnéide Filleadh ón Aonach / Coming Home from the Fair

1min
pages 74-75

Bill O’Connell Emily on the Moon

1min
page 72

Dan Murphy Two Poems

1min
page 71

Peuo Tuy Saffron Robe

1min
page 73

Carlo Morrissey The Boulevard, July 1962

1min
page 70

Bunkong Tuon Always There Was Rice

1min
pages 66-67

Moira Linehan Something Has Been Lost

1min
page 69

Grace Wells Curlew

1min
pages 62-63

Chath pierSath The Rose of Battambang

1min
page 64

Richard P. Howe, Jr. Protecting the Capitol: 1861 & 2021

4min
pages 40-41

Paul Brouillette A Pilgrimage to Selma and Montgomery

16min
pages 42-50

Helena Minton Daily Walk in the Quarter

1min
page 61

Richard P. Howe, Jr. Interview with Pierre V. Comtois

20min
pages 51-60

Amina Mohammed Change

2min
pages 26-27

Catherine Drea Beginning Again

6min
pages 35-37

Living Deliberately

31min
pages 15-25

Elise Martin An Abundance of Flags

4min
pages 28-29

Mark Pawlak New Normal

1min
page 31

Malcolm Sharps The Mask of Sorrow, a Tragic Face Revealed

5min
pages 38-39

Kathleen Aponick Omen

1min
page 30

Charles Coe Twenty-Two Staples

8min
pages 32-34
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