National Post (National Edition)

`The guy tending the store'

- BILL TROTT

Poet and publisher Lawrence Ferlinghet­ti, whose City Lights Bookstore in San Francisco became a literary haven for Beat Generation writers including Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, has died at the age of 101.

Ferlinghet­ti, who played a key role in a free-speech battle after he published Ginsberg's poem Howl in 1956, died Monday evening, City Lights Books said, adding “We love you, Lawrence.”

When Ferlinghet­ti turned 100 on March 24, 2019, San Francisco officials declared it Lawrence Ferlinghet­ti Day. City Lights threw a party, although the honoree did not attend. The Beat Generation first percolated in New York in the 1950s but Kerouac, Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs and a slew of other writers, artists, hipsters, activists and thrill-seekers would eventually wander west to San Francisco's North Beach to hang out at City Lights.

“I keep telling people I wasn't a member of the original Beat Generation,” Ferlinghet­ti told The Los Angeles Times in 2005. “I was sort of the guy tending the store.”

In 1957, Ferlinghet­ti found himself on the front line of a constituti­onal fight when he was arrested after publishing and selling Ginsberg's groundbrea­king Howl and Other Poems. While Beat peers considered it an epic achievemen­t, Howl shocked many with its references to drugs and homosexual­ity and renunciati­on of mainstream society. A judge cleared Ferlinghet­ti, ruling Howl was not obscene.

Ferlinghet­ti and Peter D. Martin, a sociology student at the time, had founded City Lights in 1953, naming it for Charlie Chaplin's 1931 movie.

“City Lights became about the only place around where you could go in, sit down and read books without being pestered to buy something,” Ferlinghet­ti told The Hartford Courant in 2006. “Also, I had this idea that a bookstore should be a centre of intellectu­al activity.”

The most successful of his many works was the 1958 poetry collection A Coney Island of the Mind, which sold more than a million copies.

Born in Yonkers, N.Y., Ferlinghet­ti earned a journalism degree at the University of North Carolina, and served in the U.S. Navy in the Second World War. During his service, he toured Nagasaki six weeks after it was hit with a U.S. atomic bomb. He told The San Francisco Chronicle that in the rubble he found a teacup with what appeared to be human flesh melted on it. “In that instant, I became a total pacifist,” he said.

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Lawrence Ferlinghet­ti

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