Showing posts with label Kerouac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kerouac. Show all posts
Friday, 13 September 2013
Wednesday, 31 October 2012
How do you like my new typewriter*
* No, not an Underwood Portable and not THIS particular machine, but in Kerouac's estate was a Hermes 3000 just like this, along with a repair bill. It had been dropped. It fetched $22,500 in 2010.
From the Christies auction site:
"KEROUAC'S LAST TYPEWRITER, which he used from 1966 until his death in
1969. He announces its arrival in a 29 August 1966 letter to his agent,
Sterling Lord: "How do you like my new typewriter?" The new machine "was
necessary," he explains, "as the old one broke in two, but, and that's
what broke my budget, and now it'll be taxes." Lord received many
letters from this machine about Kerouac's money problems: "Where are the
ROAD royalties to 6/30/66," he asks on 18 January 1967, "and same
royalties (6/30/66) for SUR... Great time of stress. Need money to
fence-in magnificent part wooded yard." He also hoped to build a study
"where I'll be writing VANITY OF DULUOZ in month of March after Greek
Orthodox Church wedding in February" (to Stella Sampas). Vanity was published in 1968. It would be the last novel published in his lifetime. His novella Pic
would appear in 1971. This typewriter had to make a visit to the
repairman in January 1969. The repairman's receipt for $22.83 (which
survives in the Kerouac Papers), diagnoses the problem as "Dropped." The
Kerouac Papers also contain the Hermes operating manual for this
typewriter."
Labels:
basket shift,
green,
Hermes 3000,
Kerouac,
Paillard,
Seafoam,
Swiss,
typecast,
Yverdon
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