
A lifetime ago, I remember reading Jack Kerouac’s On the Road, the best known literary product of the beatnik era. I’ve never forgotten the energy of that book that set off a generation on their own trips. Apparently, the magic of the novel is still alive. Carina Hoak recently posted a related synchronicity on Facebook. After reading On the Road, she picked up another book and here’s what happened.
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I’ve recently bought myself a book entitled “Siddhartha”, by Hermann Hesse. While leafing through it at home, I came across this following passage (much to my surprise):
“In the parlance of cinema, Siddhartha would qualify as a ‘road movie.’ But because the protagonist’s personal motto throughout his various and sometimes contradictory stages of development remains “Thinking, waiting, fasting,” and because he wanders barefoot in an age (circa 500 B.C.) when there was nary a pedal to push to the metal, he logs in a tiny fraction of the mileage accumulated by, say, the characters in On the Road. (…)
“Siddhartha nonetheless does bear a superficial resemblance to Kerouac’s novel, in which, despite their relentless pursuit of kicks, the beatniks maintain a fascination with Eastern philosophy, and, however crudely, demonstrate a hunger for spiritual illumination. For his part, Siddhartha also takes a detour through the pleasurelands of flesh and fermentation before moving on to more refined ground.”
Small detail: I had been reading On the Road a week ago.
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I read Siddhartha back when I was reading everything that Hermann Hesse wrote. Loved Damian, too. I don’t remember any preface with references to Kerouac or On the Road in the edition of Siddhartha I read, but I do know that, like Carina, I read the Hesse novel around the same time I read On the Road.
An added synchronistic touch: After I saw Carina’s post at this Facebook synchronicity site, I added a post about the link between synchronicity and travel. Carina e-mailed me saying that what I said about travel was very true. She’d just returned from a trip and that was when she’d read On the Road and started Siddhartha. – Rob
















