
Perhaps Sal Paradise and Dean Moriarty had it right? Drive a beat-up car across the country, searching for the real America; find that touchable and believable reality. The young Marylou is along for the ride; she adds the angst to their search: a real woman, one to drive the two of them mad. Three is a tangled mess. Two recovering Catholic boys question their upbringing. Harsh realisms, self-flagellating, pot smoking, cheap liquor guzzling, teetering on becoming a criminal or a saint.
Roughians, hooligans, hipsters, Bohemians, and rapscallions. These were the self-educated beast shaped by the great depression that taught us that America isn’t perfect and never can be as long as flawed and greedy people make decisions for the masses. Lords and Cerfs; Alms for the poor, sir?
The late 1940s was a time of realism. Fantasy was for the dreams of children. The recent brutal world war ended the tragic depression years, and sacrifices and loss of human life in far-off lands all played out in real-time, not on a roll of film. There was no “escape from reality.”
The coterie of Bohemian writers and artists was forming. Jackson Pollock was dripping paint, Picasso was mutilating women on canvas, and Papa Hemingway, John Steinbeck, Alan Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Neal Cassady, and Jack Kerouac sat around small tables in dingy cafes and bars slamming down hooch, and writing the real stuff that made us smile, think, cry, or recoil in disgust. They took the American reality from the 1930s and 1940s and gave it to us with a backhanded slap to the face. It awakened some of us, the ones that paid attention.
Jack Kerouac and the rest of his group weren’t meant for literary sainthood; they were too stained, too fallible, and over-baptized. America was real; life was not always the astringed family of mom and pop, two kids, and a cocker spaniel. Sometimes it hurt. More often than not, it was damned good. Men were riddled with imperfections but still knew how to be male, and women were as perfect as they were created to be.
Somewhere on this trip, along the road, America lost its reality, and people turned to fantasy. Now, we are lost in a landslide, with no escape from a warped reality. The road goes on.
Discover more from Notes From The Cactus Patch
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

At least we have a president instead of a Queen. (Oh, wait. They have a king over there now. Never mind!) And we live on Earth instead of on Mercury. (It’s a dead planet anyway.)
LikeLike
The king acts like a queen. Do you know about the authors? You know about those guys?
LikeLike
Apparently, the main characters, Sal Paradise and Dean Moriarty, are based on Jack Kerouac himself and his friend Neal Cassady. I’ve heard about On the Road for years, but haven’t actually read the book.
LikeLike
Yep, they were based on the two of them. Mary Lou was based on Neals wife. You should read the book, it was a game changer in that era of literary conscious. There was also a movie, but it was awful.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Excellent read, Phil.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thanks, Nancy. Figured you would get it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
This feels like a raw snapshot, really liked it, I’ve shared some thoughts recently as well, and it would mean a lot if you could take a moment to read it out, https://beyondthecanvas13.wordpress.com/2025/08/21/somewhere-between-survival-and-soul/
LikeLike
Thank you, I will check them out. Yep, I can get pretty raw at times. Glad you recognized that.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I read a few of your recent post and am now following you. Great stuff you write, and thank you for leading me to your blog.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you it really means a lot, thank you so much
LikeLiked by 1 person
Cause & effect.
LikeLiked by 1 person