EBOOK

Come and Join the Dance

A Novel

Joyce Johnson
3
(1)
Pages
184
Year
2014
Language
English

About

The daring debut of the Beat Generation's first woman novelist. It's 1955. Seven days before her graduation from Barnard College, Susan Levitt asks herself, "What if you lived your entire life without urgency?" just before going out to make things happen to her that will shatter the mask of conformity concealing her feelings of alienation. If Susan continues to be "good," marriage and security await her. But her hunger is rising for the self-discovery that comes from existential freedom. After breaking up with the Columbia boy she knows she could marry, Susan seeks out those she considers "outlaws": the brave and fragile Kay, who has moved into a rundown hotel, in order to "see more than fifty percent when I walk down the street;" the vulnerable adolescent rebel Anthony; and Peter, the restless hipster graduate student who has become the object of Kay's unrequited devotion. This fascinating novel - which the author began writing a year before her encounter with Jack Kerouac - is a young woman's complex response to the liberating messages of the Beat Generation. In a subversive feminist move, Johnson gives her heroine all the freedom the male Beat writers reserved for men, to travel her own road.

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Reviews

"With its female bohemian perspective on sex, cold war existentialism and the New York hipster milieu, Come and Join the Dance stands as a Beat urtext, on par with the renegade declarations of On the Road or Howl or Naked Lunch."
Ronna Johnson, author of Girls Who Wore Black
"This artful and unaffected first novel by 26-year-old Joyce Glassman reminds us that youth is no fixed quantity or state with an all-explaining adjective. It is a period of becoming whose essence is flux: the lostness or wildness are merely way stations along this road of change."
The New York Times Book Review

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