Writer Carolyn Cassady of Beat Generation Dies

Married to Neal Cassady for more than 20 years, she was also a close friend of Beat generation poet Allen Ginsberg.

Carolyn Cassady, a writer who was married to Jack Kerouac's travel companion and a lover of the famous Beat author, has died. She was 90 years old.

Longtime friend Estelle Cimino, co-owner of the Beat Museum in San Francisco, said Saturday that Carolyn Cassady died Friday in a hospital near her home in Bracknell, southeast England. Cimino and her husband are longtime family friends of Cassady and her children. Cause of death was not immediately clear.

Cassady was married to Neal Cassady — a central character in the Beat generation and the basis of the character Dean Moriarty in Kerouac's "On the Road" — for around 20 years. The couple had three children.

She was also a close friend of Beat poet Allen Ginsberg, and chronicled her experiences with the three in the memoir "Off the Road: My Years with Cassady, Kerouac and Ginsberg," published in 1990. The memoir, which was rereleased in 2007 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of Kerouac's seminal novel, was one of many attempts Cassady made to correct what she saw as myths about the Beat Generation and misrepresentation of her husband.

"I've tried to share my memories," she told Britain's Telegraph newspaper in 2012. "But people just don't seem to want to hear. They prefer to believe the other version."

Carolyn Cassady was born in Lansing, Mich., in 1923 and grew up in Nashville, Tenn. She first met a then-married Neal Cassady, Kerouac and Ginsberg while she was at the University of Denver getting a masters' degree in Fine Arts and Theater Arts. She and Neil Cassady married in 1948 — after he had obtained a divorce from his wife.

They had three children and were married for around 15 years. She also had an affair with Kerouac — at Neal Cassady's urging, Carolyn said.

In the 2011 English-language Swedish documentary film titled "Love Always, Carolyn," she said it was "Neal's wish to share me" with Kerouac. "I was against it, to begin with, but it was a survival for me to keep the man I loved."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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