<p><span style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>Part road novel and part reality-inspired fiction </span><em style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>BEAT BLUES: San Francisco 1955</em><span style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)> explores a time and a place when the American counterculture was born southern racism was exposed and the Cold War began to thaw with the publication of Ginsberg's </span><em style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>Howl</em><span style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)> Kerouac's </span><em style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>On the Road</em><span style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)> Ferlinghetti's </span><em style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>A Coney Island of the Mind</em><span style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)> Bob Kaufman's </span><em style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>Abomunist Manifesto</em><span style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)> and the magazine Beatitude. </span><em style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>BEAT BLUES </em><span style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>takes readers behind the scenes at Lawrence Ferlinghetti's City Lights Bookstore and into the enclaves of San Francisco where bohemians artists and hipsters dig jazz greats and rub shoulders with Gregory Corso Nelson Algren and Simone de Beauvoir.</span></p><p><span style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><p><span style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>A well-woven spy novel set in the seething influential Beat Generation milieu of San Francisco 1955. Raskin</p><p>has done his research. When he has Jack Kerouac Allen Ginsberg Bob Kaufman Lawrence Ferlinghetti Shig Murao and Gregory Corso speak the results are in the ballpark of reality. He's good at depicting the moiling</p><p>lives of Beat era figures such as the tragic Natalie Jackson featured in Kerouac's <em>The Dharma Bums</em>. The novel skillfully blends activities of the burgeoning Civil Rights movement into the liberation-loving Beat era. -Ed Sanders</p><p><span style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>Rendezvous with Allen Ginsberg Jack Kerouac Bob Kaufman Neal Cassady and their near constant companion Natalie Jackson all of them on the border that divides anonymity from notoriety and madness from sanity. </span><em style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)>Beat Blues</em><span style=color: rgba(0 0 0 1)> observes the Beat phenomena through the eyes of Norman de Haan an ex-New Yorker and a veteran of World War II who moves back and forth from North Beach to the Black neighborhood in the Fillmore District where the Civil Rights movement reverberates and the characters mourn the murder of </span>Emmett Till.</p>