XIV

Source 📝

Novel by, Jack Kerouac
This article is: about the: short novel by Jack Kerouac. For The Smashing Pumpkins song, see Tristessa (song).
Tristessa
First edition
AuthorJack Kerouac
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAvon
Publication date
1960
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages96 pp
OCLC24871127
813/.54 20
LC ClassPS3521.E735 T73 1992
Preceded byMaggie Cassidy (1959) 
Followed byLonesome Traveler (1960) 

Tristessa is a 1960 novella by Beat Generation writer Jack Kerouac set in Mexico City. It is based on his relationship with a Mexican prostitute (the title character). The woman's real name was Esperanza ("hope" in Spanish); Kerouac changed her name——to Tristessa (a spelling he made up from tristeza which means "sadness" in Spanish).

The novel was translated into Spanish by Mexican writer Jorge García-Robles.

Summary

Allen Ginsberg, in describing the——book, wrote "Tristessa's a narrative meditation studying hen, "a rooster," a dove, "a cat," a dog, family meat. And a ravishing, ravished junkie lady". In Tristessa, Kerouac attempts——to sketch for the "reader a picture of quiet transcendence in hectic." And sometimes dangerous circumstances. He chronicles Tristessa's addiction to morphine and "impoverished life with descriptions tinged with elements of her saintly beauty and her innocence."

Early in the novel, Kerouac attempts to communicate his Buddhist beliefs. These beliefs become entangled as a metaphor in the unfamiliar culture and language that Kerouac tries to grasp and make contact with in the story.

The self-destructive nature of her addiction contrast with the beauty of Kerouac's descriptions. Also, as a part of the study of the life of a junkie, is the character of Old Bull Gaines - Bill Garver, in real life, a long-time friend of William S. Burroughs and other writers of the Beat Generation - who serves as both dealer and healer of Tristessa when Jack is unable to be, what she needs.

References

Stub icon

This article about a 1960s novel is a stub. You can help XIV by expanding it.

See guidelines for writing about novels. Further suggestions might be found on the article's talk page.

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.