The first novel by Jan Kerouac, daughter of Jack--a thrilling work of autobiographical fiction that captures with inspired detail a life driven by adventure, drugs, far-flung travel, and like her father, a relentless quest for pure experience. "If [Jack] Kerouac sometimes put a spiritual gloss on poverty and life on the edge, his daughter offered an unflinching vision." --
The Guardian "Was it January or February? The coconut fronds waving, shining like green hair in the sun, gave no clue." Fifteen-year-old Jan is pregnant, gamely living off rice and whatever fish her boyfriend John can catch in Yelapa, Mexico. She and John, who introduced her to Beckett, Kafka, Joyce, and Dostoevsky, are writing a novel together. Before she can leave for Guadalajara where she plans to deliver her baby, she goes into labor three months early, and the baby is stillborn. She turns sixteen soon after and decides to head north.
Jan Kerouac, the only child of Jack Kerouac and Joan Haverty Kerouac, published her autobiographical novel
Baby Driver in 1981. Unacknowledged by her father, she is haunted by the absence of his love. With a graceful, sometimes disturbing detachment and intense lyricism, she explores the freewheeling soul of a woman on her own road.
From an adolescence on the Lower East Side of Manhattan dropping LSD and doing time in detention homes, to the peace movement in Haight-Ashbury and Washington state, to traveling by bus through Central America with a madman for a lover, Jan lives by her wits and whims, rhapsodic and irrepressible.
Author: Jan Kerouac
Publisher: New York Review of Books
Published: 11/11/2025
Pages: 224
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.81lbs
ISBN: 9781681379739
About the Author
Jan Kerouac (1952-1996) was the only daughter of Jack Kerouac and the author of the autobiographical novels Baby Driver, Trainsong, and Parrot Fever.
Amanda Fortini is a columnist for
County Highway, a frequent contributor to
T: The New York Times Style Magazine, and has also written for
The New Yorker, The Believer, California Sunday, and
The Paris Review, among other publications. A 2020 recipient of the Rabkin Prize for art journalism, she divides her time between Livingston, Montana, and Las Vegas, Nevada, the city about which she is writing a book of essays.