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Other editions of book The Dharma Bums

  • The Dharma Bums

    Jack Kerouac

    Mass Market Paperback (Signet, Oct. 1, 1959)
    None
  • The Dharma Bums

    Jack Kerouac

    Paperback (Signet/New American Library, March 15, 1959)
    The book that turned on the Hippies! No crease to spine, Pages tanned with age. Tips of a few page corners damaged.
  • The Dharma Bums

    Jack Kerouac

    Unknown Binding (Penguin Classics, March 15, 1682)
    Excellent Book
  • The Dharma Bums

    Jack Kerouac

    Paperback (Penguin, March 15, 1986)
    The Dharma Bums (Paperback) by Jack Kerouac
  • The Dharma Bums

    Jack Kerouac

    Mass Market Paperback (Signet, Oct. 1, 1959)
    One of the best and most popular of Kerouac's autobiographical novels, The Dharma Bums is based on experiences the writer had during the mid-1950s while living in California, after he'd become interested in Buddhism's spiritual mode of understanding. One of the book's main characters, Japhy Ryder, is based on the real poet Gary Snyder, who was a close friend and whose interest in Buddhism influenced Kerouac.
  • The Dharma Bums

    Jack Kerouac

    Hardcover (Viking Press, March 15, 1958)
    Book
  • The Dharma Bums

    JACK KEROUAC

    Paperback (FLAMINGO, March 15, 1994)
    None
  • The Dharma Bums

    Jack Kerouac

    Mass Market Paperback (Signet, Oct. 1, 1959)
    None
  • The Dharma Bums

    Jack Kerouac

    Hardcover (Lightyear Pr, June 1, 1995)
    Two ebullient young men search for Truth the Zen way: from marathon wine-drinking bouts, poetry jam sessions, and "yabyum" in San Francisco's Bohemia to solitude in the high Sierras and a vigil atop Desolation Peak in Washington State. Published just a year after "On the Road" put the Beat Generation on the map, "The Dharma Bums" is sparked by Kerouac's expansiveness, humor, and a contagious zest for life.
  • Dharma Bums

    Jack Kerouac

    Hardcover (Amereon Ltd, June 1, 1976)
    One of the best and most popular of Kerouac's autobiographical novels, The Dharma Bums is based on experiences the writer had during the mid-1950s while living in California, after he'd become interested in Buddhism's spiritual mode of understanding. One of the book's main characters, Japhy Ryder, is based on the real poet Gary Snyder, who was a close friend and whose interest in Buddhism influenced Kerouac.
  • The Dharma Bums: 50th Anniversary Edition

    Jack Kerouac

    Hardcover (Viking Adult, Sept. 18, 2008)
    A deluxe edition of Kerouac’s masterpiece on the 50th anniversary of its first publicationFirst published in 1958, a year after On the Road had put the Beat generation on the map, The Dharma Bums stands as one of Jack Kerouac’s most powerful, influential, and bestselling novels. The story focuses on two untrammeled young Americans—mountaineer, poet, and Zen Buddhist Japhy Ryder and Ray Smith, a zestful, innocent writer—whose quest for Truth leads them on a heroic odyssey, from marathon parties and poetry jam sessions in San Francisco’s Bohemia to solitude and mountain climbing in the High Sierras to Ray’s sixty-day vigil by himself atop Desolation Peak in Washington State. Primary to this evocative and soulful novel is an honest, exuberant search for an affirmative way of life in the midst of the atomic age. In many ways, The Dharma Bums also presaged the environmental, back-to-the-land, and American Buddhist movements of the 1960s and beyond.
  • The Dharma Bums

    Jack Kerouac

    Mass Market Paperback (Signet, Oct. 1, 1959)
    Another autobiographical novel from Kerouac, THE DHARMA BUMS, encompasses the ideals of freedom set forth by Whitman and Thoreau, with Buddhism thrown in for good measure. Focusing on the friendship between Ray Smith (modeled on Kerouac) and Japhy Ryder (Gary Snyder), the Buddhist sub-theme is evoked in Smith and Ryder's wish to introduce the concept of Dharma to others. Acknowledged by Kerouac scholars to be a more mature work than ON THE ROAD, THE DHARMA BUMS is called "perhaps the most representative expression of the Beat sensibility in a work of fiction" by Sue L. Kimball in "Critical Survey of Long Fiction."