Years later, after meeting Peter Martin, the publisher of City Lights magazine, the two opened a bookshop by the same name. It soon became a mecca for writers and artists of the Beat period. Over the years, Ferlinghetti -- with his relatively plain-spoken verse -- became one of the key figures of the Beat Generation and his character is entrenched in Beat lore. In fact, Ferlinghetti's Big Sur cabin was the focal point of Jack Kerouac's 1962 novel -Big Sur. (Ferlinghetti appears in the book as Lorenzo Monsanto, who tries to persuade a drunken, well-known author based on Kerouac to immerse himself in nature and stop drinking.) Ferlinghetti has remained active over the years as a widely published poet, political activist, and proprietor of City Lights. In 1997, Rykodisc released a spoken word album of Ferlinghetti's 30-poem cycle Coney Island of the Mind. Members of the band Morphine provided accompaniment. ~ Erik Hage, Rovi
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Autobiography |
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Dog |
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I Am Waiting |