Go (Holmes novel)
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OCLC 62760722 | |
Go is a semi-
Plot introduction
Go concerns protagonist Paul Hobbes' struggle to maintain his marriage to his wife, Kathryn, while simultaneously indulging in the world of the 1940s and 1950s Beat Generation. It follows the complications of interpersonal relationships arising from a group of disillusioned and often eccentric young people. Hobbes finds himself in a world of promiscuity, casual drug use and petty crime but retains a certain detachment from it, sometimes to the annoyance of his friends. From wild all night parties to Allen Ginsberg's visions of William Blake to the death of Bill Cannastra, the events of the book are largely real events, some of them alluded to in other beat works, most notably Ginsberg's "Howl". Holmes has said that the only plot element entirely invented by himself is Kathryn's infidelity.[1]
Different titles
The original manuscript was named The Daybreak Boys as an allusion to a rivergang on the New York waterfront in the 1840s, but this title was rejected as a book with a similar title had been published by
Characters in Go
The characters in Go are, as was common in
- Paul Hobbes is John Clellon Holmes
- Gene Pasternak is Jack Kerouac
- David Stofsky is Allen Ginsberg
- Hart Kennedy is Neal Cassady
- Will Dennison is William S. Burroughs
- Bill Agatson is Bill Cannastra
- Albert Ancke is Herbert Huncke
- Dinah is LuAnne Henderson
- Ed Schindel is Al Hinkle
Release details
- 1952, USA, Scribner's (ISBN 0141188391), Pub date ? ? 1952, hardback