Thursday, March 28, 2019

28th sentence of the 28th book

Roy Eldridge

The 28th book on my Kerouac bookshelf is Jack Kerouac's The Sea is My Brother (Penguin Classics, 2011), and the 28th sentence (in honor of today being the 28th day of the month) is:
One of the sailors, a husky dark-haired pharmacist's mate, talked all the time about Roy Eldridge's trumpet and why he was ten years ahead of any other jazz musician except perhaps two others who jammed Mondays at Minton's in Harlem, Lester somebody [Young] and Ben Webster; and how Roy Eldridge was really a phenomenal thinker with infinite musical ideas. (p. 19)
I curated this book here. Beyond that, nothing comes to mind to say here except that it's important to know that in the term, BASE jumping, BASE is an acronym for building, antenna, span, earth (the fixed structures a parachutist or wingsuiter jumps off). What does that have to do with Kerouac? Nothing, but it was on my mind and now it's on yours. How's that for yielding power?

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