Showing posts with label american literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label american literature. Show all posts

13 May 2020

BEGGARS OF LIFE - Jim Tully


BEGGARS OF LIFE
A Hobo autobiography  
Jim Tully

This novelistic memoir impressed readers and reviewers with its remarkable vitality and honesty. Jim Tully left his hometown of St. Marys, Ohio, in 1901, spending most of his teenage years in the company of hoboes. Drifting across the country as a road kid, he spent those years scrambling into boxcars, sleeping in hobo jungles, avoiding railroad cops, begging meals from back doors, and haunting public libraries. Tully crafted these memories into a weird and astonishing chronicle of the American underclass, in this autobiographical novel published in 1924. Tully saw it all, from a church baptism in the Mississippi River to election day in Chicago. Tully's devotion to Mark Twain and Jack London taught him the importance of giving the reader a sense of place, and this he does brilliantly, again and again. Many saw the dark side of the American dream, but none wrote about it like Jim Tully. 

Jim Tully (June 3, 1886 – June 22, 1947) was a vagabond, pugilist, and American writer. Known as Cincinnati Red during his years as a road-kid, he counted prizefighter and publicist of Charlie Chaplin among his many jobs. He also memorably crossed paths with Jack London, F. Scott Fitzgerald, George Bernard Shaw, James Joyce, and Langston Hughes. He is considered one of the inventors of the hard-boiled style of American writing. 

«Tramping in wild and windy places, without money, food, or shelter, was better for me than supinely bowing to any conventional decree of fate. The road gave me one jewel beyond price, the leisure to read and dream. If it made me old and wearily wise at twenty, it gave me for companions the great minds of all the ages, who talked to me with royal words». 

Jim Tully