Desolation Angels
by Jack Kerouac
Narrated by Andrew Eiden
Why Listen to This Audiobook?
Kerouac wrote this stranded alone on a mountain watching for fires and losing his faith — Eiden makes you feel every restless hour of it.
- Great if you want: raw Beat Generation prose and unfiltered existential wandering
- Listening experience: meditative and uneven — peaks of brilliance between long drift
- Narration: Eiden's understated delivery suits the confessional, journal-entry intimacy
- Skip if: you need narrative momentum — this meanders by design
About This Audiobook
In 1956, Jack Kerouac climbed to Desolation Peak in the North Cascades to work as a fire lookout, sixty-three days of radical solitude that he turned into the opening section of Desolation Angels. The novel, written years before its 1965 publication, follows the protagonist Jack Duluoz from the mountain into the bohemian worlds of San Francisco, Mexico City, Tangier, Paris, and New York, charting the gradual disillusionment of the Beat generation's dream and Kerouac's own growing withdrawal from the Buddhist philosophy that had briefly anchored him. It is a transitional work, somewhere between celebration and elegy.
Andrew Eiden narrates with a voice suited to Kerouac's rhythmic, improvisatory prose, capturing the musical quality of the sentences without making the performance feel mannered. The novel's meditative passages, particularly the mountain sections, benefit from a narration that can sustain long atmospheric stretches, and Eiden handles both the introspective quiet and the social chaos of Duluoz's urban adventures. At just over fourteen hours, Desolation Angels rewards listeners drawn to literary fiction at the edge of autobiography.