It's easy to bag on Kerouac if you don't understand his roots. I feel bad for the folks who don't enjoy his work. I've been reading and rereading him for years and years. I can't explain the feeling I get from his work. If anyone is looking to read a well written biography of Jack, the one by Dennis McNally is well written. Gives a detailed overview of his life, and is well researched. Thanks Kerouac. You suffered for your art, and it shows. 🙏🏻❤️
Absolutely the same. I stopped trying to explain that feeling to others, but I have kept coming back to him periodically over three decades. The man's writing is no less untamed than Neal Cassady's driving.
“All over America highschool and college kids thinking 'Jack Duluoz is 26 years old and on the road all the time hitch hiking' while there I am almost 40 years old, bored and jaded” - This kills me every time.
The ending of this book is the most crystalline account of a breakdown I’ve ever read....I was literally having a panic attack first time reading it. To be able to capture that, months/years after experiencing it, truly shows the genius of Kerouac
Big Sur is always in my soul. For deep-feeling people, it is a place that gets under your skin and never lets go. My housemate bought a big swatch of land there 20 years ago for a small coin. It's a rare place surrounded by state forest land on all sides. He had to build a 3 mile trail to the ridge where he built a beautiful little cabin with huge windows. He brought every single bit of that cabin in by wheelbarrow. I feel Jack's soul when I cross that beautiful bridge .
@@Jmcsj02 we were thinking of maybe doing an air bnb there, but it’s a bit tricky due to how extremely remote it is; the rough terrain getting there and the long hike in...wed need to look into getting insurance for sure.
@@poppybell8217 Yeah, but between old Pals like us. There is no need of such formalities. Ill be sure to leave the rat poison out and dig my own garbage pit 😉
What a masterpiece of a book...this slow burn that flares at the end into a descent of DT hallucinations and paranoias. Big Sur....Desolations Angels....Dharma Bums....Visions of Cody in all its experimental dialog and madness...I spent about 15 years reading and re-reading the entire saga of Dulouz and honestly believe it shaped the person I am today. I always think of Jack just wanting a bologna sandwich and a pickle and chips in his mother’s kitchen (such a Massachusetts lunch, as a lifelong resident myself) with the window open and breeze blowing the Lowell curtains. It took him all these years of mad scrambling to realize he just wanted his cat and a quiet lunch in peace
Ah yes. That was his "Rosebud". I myself feel that I am in eternal debt to Jack. Finding his books quite literally changed my life, and the way I Interpret my own thoughts and experiences. Ive read most of his books now and listened to them dozens of times on youtube. Each time I pick up on something new and profound that I am amazed to have missed previously.
@@KhalDrogo76 not to play the Harvard snot, but , but truthfully, almost anyone could write this sh,*t down.. Only they didn't and Jack did. . here, here.
@@sterlingwalter5971 you clearly wouldn't know the beauty of prose if it whacked you in the head or you haven't read Mexico City Blues or Visions of Cody, et.al. Kerouac took the spontaneity of jazz and had the ear to recall the Okie lingo and his French slang and hipster talk of the day to create such prose that Dylan was fired up on to write his music that literally changed a generation- what Kerouac called "spit forth intelligence at the moment." You wouldn't be the first quasi intellect to completely miss the point and beauty, the NY Times attacked him for years...Kerouac was just the next to take American consciousness from Whitman and Gertrude Stein; you can protest all you wish, it doesn't change his historical importance
This book is so beautiful just in how powerful it is in having us live through his body, eyes and mind. If you imagine this book is completely fictional you can really start to break apart how the author did this so magically. I'm just a teenager so those of you who don't have to rely on intuition and are educated to understand a more technical way of putting it may just find this as a basic baby way of describing Kerouac's work, but its how he uses his descriptive skills to supplement his thoughts which carry the emotional appeal where the content just drives you to keep reading. In retrospect, not much actually happens compared to something like Mr.Beast giving away millions of dollars. Yet its that skill that captivates us way more than a high stakes gameshow style of content could do.
This is, as far as I know, the most symphonic use of the English language since Milton's Paradise Lost. I read it in its first paperback edition at age 15 in 1963.
When I was about 15 or 16 I read "No One Here Gets Out Alive"... The biography of Jim Morrison. It began a journey of literature that took me no where. What I mean is... After all those great words and my own lack of words... I find myself lusting in someone else's alcoholism as my own is reaching it's limits.
YO JIMBO! Wow, it's so so wild and somewhat comforting yet very strange all the same, to see what would pass as my own thoughts and first introductions of cool literature borne from the devouring off "No one here gets out alive" I think it was Danny Sugerman, that which opened up the door to find the rabbit hole, tracking down Kerouacs "On the Road" and then that, blew our minds wide open leaving a gaping hole and a new form of hunger and thirst, thirst for alcohol, sorry I'm writing for the both of us now, I mean we started from the same point, I do wonder though if like me Friedrich Neizte was a little heavy for a fifteen year old 90,s teenager but "on the road" was another drug altogether of which I'm unashamedly addicted sending me from Jack to Burroughs to Dequincy, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Trochii, Carroll, Lenny Bruce and Jerry Stahl, Hunter. S. Thompson, Phillip Dick to Irvine Welsh, Australia's own Luke Davies and I cannot leave out the dreppresingly beautiful, words that beg you to read out Aloud "Jesus Son" by Dennis Johnson and if you haven't yet read it, get it!!!!It's as pure and intoxicatedly addictive as stamped No4 China White heroin leading even the basic reader through a realistic yet poetic trip into drug addiction and being the first and last person at the bar. Cheers brother....in all sincerety,,,... PsB77
I think- in a way- the alcohol fueled Kerouac to write in the streams he employed. But the personal disintegration from chemical dependency in this story is profound and sad. He was the beautiful, sweet genius of that era!
Thats not the only thing going on in this book . Kerouac had made the big time compared to the other writers he admired . He started to get paranoid and unhappy . Of course the boozing only made it worse .
This book contains the best description of a nervous breakdown I've ever heard but the last 10-15 minutes of monologue are completely absurd. YAROOHH!!!
I'm barely past chapter three and my heart is all a'flutter at how he paints such vivid pictures with words. Does anyone write like this anymore? I don't know! i find most modern writers barely tolerable. he has so much passion for someone who burned out so young. most people today seem to lack that element.
Agreed. Ive been listening to this and his reading of On the Road for years. He's fantastic. Here it os of you havent listened yet. th-cam.com/video/ucBESuXuidY/w-d-xo.html
Just the kind of book I was thinking of listening to,... On account of my real need for mental stimulation in this,... the land of instant gratification. 😂😂😂📲
47 old at 47 old age is in and it's overdue yet too young for heaven time gives seep a space, settled in the bones our forlorn hero left us long way back manuscripts knapsack things to make camp forever a transient a train riding tramp gone on this day rest in peace Jack. 10-21-22
Me likey. Hitched Obispo to Frisco in 81. Don took the Sur road, and we downed big cold Raniers. Dharma with goopy green gunk Don blended us after we ran through Golden Gate Park. Former GI and young Kiwi surfer I. Jack - I blame you.
If pressed to choose a favorite work from his collection I would have to name Desolation Angels as my favorite. That being said, I don't think that Kerouac ever produced a book that wasn't inspired by genius.
@@platoniczombie Thats a thing about the beats, they are all rather horrible and disgusting, even though there are things about them that can be admired, and they are as a whole fantastic writers.
Brutal. Jacks heart was broken because he couldn't be with Neill beyond random sexual encounters. Couldn't allow that part of him to exist so he tried to kill it with alcohol.
Im digging the music under the tape, right after the dirty-behind revelation that occurs at 1:33:35 and still applies to this day, panic runs on toilet paper, stuck right into it by a god hand
shangrila73eldorado in Tristessa he talks about another cat who was ran over on Atlantic ave in Brooklyn. He has interesting descriptions of SoHo in the 50s
Although Steppenwolf was written by an older man about an older man, it seems to work mainly for younger people. I liked it when I was 19, not so much in my 50s.
One of best writers his work is overshadowed buy his persona but if you know you know how great his writing is let's his work speak not his lifestyle beats
@@BenStarner - I lived in Mt Vernon for 21 years (and in the area for 25). On a sunny day, it is one of the most beautiful places around. Sadly, the valley has changed a lot since I moved away in the late 90s.
Chapters:
1. 0:01 2.10:37 3.13:13 4. 20:02 5. 22:50 6. 33:37 7. 53:07 8. 1:04:38
9. 1:08:27 10. 1:13:04 11. 1:21:14 12. 1:41:49 13. 1:47:55 14. 1:55:00
15. 2:07:59 16, 2:12:24 17. 2:14:14 18. 2:26:29 19. 2:33:52 20. 2:39:12
21. 2:43:43 22. 3:03:22 23. 3:16:30 24. 3:32:00 25. 3:40:45 26. 3:45:35
27. 4:03:10 28. 4:07:52 29. 4:12:09 30. 4:15:39 31. 4:24:02 32. 4:38:43
33. 4:41:07 34. 4:47:53 35. 5:05:04 36. 5:10:17 37. 5:26:00 38. 5:43:37
"Sea" Sounds Of The Pacific Ocean At Big Sur - 5:51:12
Thank you! These give me a bearing for those nights I fall asleep listening..
You are a saint, thank you so much!!!
bless your soul
To write too read ,too be . Thankfully
Macquenzie Powell has u n
It's easy to bag on Kerouac if you don't understand his roots. I feel bad for the folks who don't enjoy his work. I've been reading and rereading him for years and years. I can't explain the feeling I get from his work. If anyone is looking to read a well written biography of Jack, the one by Dennis McNally is well written. Gives a detailed overview of his life, and is well researched. Thanks Kerouac. You suffered for your art, and it shows. 🙏🏻❤️
I couldn’t agree more. He describes feeling and ideas that I am not consciously aware of until I read them. Truly incredible
Absolutely the same. I stopped trying to explain that feeling to others, but I have kept coming back to him periodically over three decades. The man's writing is no less untamed than Neal Cassady's driving.
@@BenStarner Well said. Thanks for sharing.
@@matthewbattye5343 It's a familiar and invigorating vacuum that I look forward to. I think I always will.
Ok his roots are French Canadian, that has a long catholic history.?
Your books mattered, Jack, to uncountable real souls like you, yet no one like you.
“All over America highschool and college kids thinking 'Jack Duluoz is 26 years old and on the road all the time hitch hiking' while there I am almost 40 years old, bored and jaded” - This kills me every time.
Who is that?
@@-o-light8863 From "Big Sur"
I felt this
Allen Ginsburg imitating Willam Burroughs of the Bronx.
Read this as it was being read to me 😊
The ending of this book is the most crystalline account of a breakdown I’ve ever read....I was literally having a panic attack first time reading it. To be able to capture that, months/years after experiencing it, truly shows the genius of Kerouac
It's up there with Fitzgerald's 'crack-up'
5:45 is the actual beginning of chapter one, if you'd like to bypass the intro..
Thx
Thnx
Big Sur is always in my soul. For deep-feeling people, it is a place that gets under your skin and never lets go. My housemate bought a big swatch of land there 20 years ago for a small coin. It's a rare place surrounded by state forest land on all sides. He had to build a 3 mile trail to the ridge where he built a beautiful little cabin with huge windows. He brought every single bit of that cabin in by wheelbarrow.
I feel Jack's soul when I cross that beautiful bridge .
My favourite book of Jack's xxx
Can you set me up with your friend?!
I want to rent it!
@@Jmcsj02 seriously? :-)
@@Jmcsj02 we were thinking of maybe doing an air bnb there, but it’s a bit tricky due to how extremely remote it is; the rough terrain getting there and the long hike in...wed need to look into getting insurance for sure.
@@poppybell8217 Yeah, but between old Pals like us. There is no need of such formalities. Ill be sure to leave the rat poison out and dig my own garbage pit 😉
What a masterpiece of a book...this slow burn that flares at the end into a descent of DT hallucinations and paranoias. Big Sur....Desolations Angels....Dharma Bums....Visions of Cody in all its experimental dialog and madness...I spent about 15 years reading and re-reading the entire saga of Dulouz and honestly believe it shaped the person I am today. I always think of Jack just wanting a bologna sandwich and a pickle and chips in his mother’s kitchen (such a Massachusetts lunch, as a lifelong resident myself) with the window open and breeze blowing the Lowell curtains. It took him all these years of mad scrambling to realize he just wanted his cat and a quiet lunch in peace
Ah yes. That was his "Rosebud".
I myself feel that I am in eternal debt to Jack. Finding his books quite literally changed my life, and the way I Interpret my own thoughts and experiences. Ive read most of his books now and listened to them dozens of times on youtube. Each time I pick up on something new and profound that I am amazed to have missed previously.
@@Jmcsj02 here here
@@KhalDrogo76 not to play the Harvard snot, but , but truthfully, almost anyone could write this sh,*t down..
Only they didn't and Jack did. . here, here.
@@sterlingwalter5971 you clearly wouldn't know the beauty of prose if it whacked you in the head or you haven't read Mexico City Blues or Visions of Cody, et.al. Kerouac took the spontaneity of jazz and had the ear to recall the Okie lingo and his French slang and hipster talk of the day to create such prose that Dylan was fired up on to write his music that literally changed a generation- what Kerouac called "spit forth intelligence at the moment." You wouldn't be the first quasi intellect to completely miss the point and beauty, the NY Times attacked him for years...Kerouac was just the next to take American consciousness from Whitman and Gertrude Stein; you can protest all you wish, it doesn't change his historical importance
@@KhalDrogo76 when it comes to American unconsciousness I prefer the Big Sur of Robinson Jeffers, thanks.
Nobody has ever articulated the “dark night of the soul” nor the golden light that comes after like Jack Kerouac.
F Scott Fitzgerald
Diane Di Prima
Thank you for the free listening. A piece of history relevant to us all steadily losing the thing we try to hang on to
Future's cancelled.
@@AudioPervert1 smbdy trying to cancel smbdy's future but "the earth has been here a billion years." (from the Sea Sounds chapter).
I remember reading Big Sur in Kathmandu in 1992 in between trekking the Himalayas.
Cool story ego guy.
This book is so beautiful just in how powerful it is in having us live through his body, eyes and mind. If you imagine this book is completely fictional you can really start to break apart how the author did this so magically. I'm just a teenager so those of you who don't have to rely on intuition and are educated to understand a more technical way of putting it may just find this as a basic baby way of describing Kerouac's work, but its how he uses his descriptive skills to supplement his thoughts which carry the emotional appeal where the content just drives you to keep reading. In retrospect, not much actually happens compared to something like Mr.Beast giving away millions of dollars. Yet its that skill that captivates us way more than a high stakes gameshow style of content could do.
Yes
This is, as far as I know, the most symphonic use of the English language since Milton's Paradise Lost. I read it in its first paperback edition at age 15 in 1963.
Watchful Eagleson I will now read Milton. Thanks for the connection.
As we say in S.M.A. QUE?? Que cosa espantosa!
Symphonic use of language is a wonderful way to put it, and you're spot on.
Jesus loves you
Wonder why " The catcher in the rye" gets all the fanfare and this not so much?
Damn, this is a fantastic audiobook. Thank you from the deepest pit of my dark heart for uploading this!!!
I'm wichuu .
agreed, great book and awesome narration... captured the character perfectly
I love Jack!
When I was about 15 or 16 I read "No One Here Gets Out Alive"... The biography of Jim Morrison. It began a journey of literature that took me no where. What I mean is... After all those great words and my own lack of words... I find myself lusting in someone else's alcoholism as my own is reaching it's limits.
YO JIMBO! Wow, it's so so wild and somewhat comforting yet very strange all the same, to see what would pass as my own thoughts and first introductions of cool literature borne from the devouring off "No one here gets out alive" I think it was Danny Sugerman, that which opened up the door to find the rabbit hole, tracking down Kerouacs "On the Road" and then that, blew our minds wide open leaving a gaping hole and a new form of hunger and thirst, thirst for alcohol, sorry I'm writing for the both of us now, I mean we started from the same point, I do wonder though if like me Friedrich Neizte was a little heavy for a fifteen year old 90,s teenager but "on the road" was another drug altogether of which I'm unashamedly addicted sending me from Jack to Burroughs to Dequincy, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Trochii, Carroll, Lenny Bruce and Jerry Stahl, Hunter. S. Thompson, Phillip Dick to Irvine Welsh, Australia's own Luke Davies and I cannot leave out the dreppresingly beautiful, words that beg you to read out Aloud "Jesus Son" by Dennis Johnson and if you haven't yet read it, get it!!!!It's as pure and intoxicatedly addictive as stamped No4 China White heroin leading even the basic reader through a realistic yet poetic trip into drug addiction and being the first and last person at the bar. Cheers brother....in all sincerety,,,... PsB77
I told a cousin once that I was reading On the Road and the guy looked at me as if I had totally lost my mind.
You got to read Charles Bukowsky. "If you're gonna be anything be an alcoholic". America's poet.
@@elrickization Love his stuff
Morrison turned so many on to great literature. Not bad for a ' rock star ' .
Incredible writer. This is a tragic, first person account of alcoholic delusion.
I think- in a way- the alcohol fueled Kerouac to write in the streams he employed. But the personal disintegration from chemical dependency in this story is profound and sad. He was the beautiful, sweet genius of that era!
Thats not the only thing going on in this book . Kerouac had made the big time compared to the other writers he admired . He started to get paranoid and unhappy . Of course the boozing only made it worse .
Thanks for the brilliant reading of Jack Kerowack. Loved it.
This book contains the best description of a nervous breakdown I've ever heard but the last 10-15 minutes of monologue are completely absurd. YAROOHH!!!
I'm barely past chapter three and my heart is all a'flutter at how he paints such vivid pictures with words. Does anyone write like this anymore? I don't know!
i find most modern writers barely tolerable.
he has so much passion for someone who burned out so young. most people today seem to lack that element.
Hey, I love this guy's voice.
He also read Will Durant’s “The Story of Civilization.” (How’s that for contrast?)
Jaunty. Keeps it moving.
Agreed. Ive been listening to this and his reading of On the Road for years. He's fantastic. Here it os of you havent listened yet.
th-cam.com/video/ucBESuXuidY/w-d-xo.html
...beautifully read, especially the ending, the masterful chapter on sea.
Absolutely sublime !
Just the kind of book I was thinking of listening to,... On account of my real need for mental stimulation in this,... the land of instant gratification.
😂😂😂📲
well said
You're still participating in instant gratification in this situation.
Instant gratification ? What's in it must comes out .
47
old at 47
old age is in
and it's overdue
yet too young
for heaven
time gives seep
a space, settled
in the bones
our forlorn hero
left us long way back
manuscripts knapsack
things to make camp
forever a transient
a train riding tramp
gone on this day
rest in peace Jack.
10-21-22
"Wisdom is just another way to make people sick." Wow.
And that's why ignorance is Bliss
Digg'n that tight edit between the tape flips.
Digg’n the sarcasm.
You caught that? Meant only for chuckles I can assure. Very thankful for the upload. So good. Thanks.
funny.
BOOKMARK CH 21
Thank you for uploading this masterpiece.
Ch22
Ch23
Ch27
31
32
Amazing book¡¡Kerouac was a genius¡¡
Me likey.
Hitched Obispo to Frisco in 81. Don took the Sur road, and we downed big cold Raniers. Dharma with goopy green gunk Don blended us after we ran through Golden Gate Park. Former GI and young Kiwi surfer I. Jack - I blame you.
If pressed to choose a favorite work from his collection I would have to name Desolation Angels as my favorite. That being said, I don't think that Kerouac ever produced a book that wasn't inspired by genius.
Interesting choice. I just finished that book and found myself rather disgusted and over Kerouac, Ginsberg, and the rest of the "beats."
@@platoniczombie Thats a thing about the beats, they are all rather horrible and disgusting, even though there are things about them that can be admired, and they are as a whole fantastic writers.
Self loathing seems overrated in these days when we have squandered our heritage for twatter and self driving cars.
Brutal. Jacks heart was broken because he couldn't be with Neill beyond random sexual encounters. Couldn't allow that part of him to exist so he tried to kill it with alcohol.
And he finally did kill it.
Bookmark
28:14
1:01:50
2:29:15
4:58:15
5:07:08
Finished, great book.
I love this!
I have this, but in an awful quality copy. Thanks so much for posting this good one.
Pretty damned good reading.
Thanks for this i just found a copy in a charity shop now i am reading along with it
alright, been waiting a while for this to pop up on youTube
Beautiful.
I love this one and Desolation Angels.
Chapter 1 starts at 5:45
lovely book, thank you for posting. Bookmark 1:47:24
2:26:30 Cassette Two, Side One, Chapter 18
He has a great sense of humor.
I find this much better if i think of the narrator as johnny carson.
That is some wacky , wacky stuff ! Hiyo !
Its true!!
I love the narrators voice. Such good dynamics.
Im digging the music under the tape, right after the dirty-behind revelation that occurs at 1:33:35 and still applies to this day, panic runs on toilet paper, stuck right into it by a god hand
fucking genius
All those annoying friends of his would drive me to drinking too.
I'm in Big Sur!!
Lucky...
But are you Jack Kerouac?
@@ZenFox0 - No. No I'm not.
wow...the first 3 minutes are wonderful painting a picture ( I guess that's what writers try to do, eh? Sorry...I just wanted to show my appreciation)
Thank you.
Kerouac makes a reference to staten island...pretty cool...and verrazano
shangrila73eldorado in Tristessa he talks about another cat who was ran over on Atlantic ave in Brooklyn. He has interesting descriptions of SoHo in the 50s
Sad.Oh jackie😔.
All his books read like poems
And for this we ate a whole package of Thomas English muffins toasted with butter. Amen...
Kerouac had some balls to dis Steppenwolf. He did die a terrified lost drunk. He should have paid more attention to that book.
Gotta agree man
Kerouac was talented enough to observe himself truthfully. Hermann Hesse knew to recreate a happy fairy tale ending in order to survive.
Although Steppenwolf was written by an older man about an older man, it seems to work mainly for younger people. I liked it when I was 19, not so much in my 50s.
Hey , I know Pull And Be Damned - the road.
50:42 Cassette One, Side Two
Thank you,this is my favorite Kerouac book as well...
my personal favourite was subterraneans. I never did relate to this one. Or maybe I was put off by the alcoholism.
Chapter 15 - 2:07:59
and by an Aesthetycal and Cultural way he was one of the Bests with Ginsberg Ferlinghetti and others
Town and the City is lost Amina his works. Like a prequel to On the. Road. Loved it. Unfortunately for me it’s been on permanent loan for over 35 yrs
Good book
Brill description of alcohol withdrawal/D T's.
Thanks!
love the voice - 2:00:00
Sea: Sounds of the Pacific Ocean at Big Sur 5:51:12
Jack Lemmon is a Beatnick.
50:44 continued, guess they figured out how to flip over the cassette(whatever that is).
pos
yai Ptit Jean was Franco Canadian
we were and are Peacifists and his Litterature is in Our side Jeffrey Dean
One of best writers his work is overshadowed buy his persona but if you know you know how great his writing is let's his work speak not his lifestyle beats
so nice....a Real anglosaxon Reading but sonice. many thanks Jeffrey Dean
ch 38 The Last Chapter 5:43:39
thank you
Thanks 👍
Unfortunately the sound quality makes it hard. The echo is unlistensble.
Chapter 15 2:08:00
“hipster fairy,” is what Kerouac describes seeing another white person at the jazz club.
Chapter 8 1:04:38
thanks...
Chapter 1 5:45
10:41 chapter 2
Chapter 10 1:13:04
I enjoy his novels . His philosophizing for the most part confuses me.
I no know Jean Kerouac as a person I. study his work by only a Litterary side Jeffrey Dean
13:37 chapter 3
Well put….
Chapter 3 13:34
for hope-less Romantics. several Gene-rations later.. followed.
4:45:22 Cassette Four, Side One
Chapter 2 10:38
5:49 chapter 1
20:06 chapter 4
His best book with Satori in Paris.
Whoever edited this mess needs firing ... the worst ... @ 3.45.49 you're actually hearing mobile phone signal updating!
Bookmark - 04:03:20
am i the only one that hears music in the background? am i insane? it's barely audible.
Timothy Price yes
Like um 1:34? Sounds like some African toon..
What music?
Pull & Be Damned.... is this Tom???
Not Tom. Ben - 🍺
Ok - just wondering. There is a famous author who used to live on Pull Snd Be Damned Rd in La Conner, WA. It’s not often I see this road name.
@@mskraftee5252 I’m familiar with Pull and be dammed rd. I used to live on the reservation out near there. Skagit county is dreamy.
@@BenStarner - I lived in Mt Vernon for 21 years (and in the area for 25). On a sunny day, it is one of the most beautiful places around. Sadly, the valley has changed a lot since I moved away in the late 90s.
@@mskraftee5252 ya, I was born in Anacortes and still live there. It’s changed a lot since the late 90’s. So much so we may move away.
This comment from PULL...(thanks!) should be placed as TOP so it keeps the chapter links available
1. 0:01 2.10:37 3.13:13 4. 20:02 5. 22:50 6. 33:37 7. 53:07 8. 1:04:38
9. 1:08:27 10. 1:13:04 11. 1:21:14 12. 1:41:49 13. 1:47:55 14. 1:55:00
15. 2:07:59 16, 2:12:24 17. 2:14:14 18. 2:26:29 19. 2:33:52 20. 2:39:12
21. 2:43:43 22. 3:03:22 23. 3:16:30 24. 3:32:00 25. 3:40:45 26. 3:45:35
27. 4:03:10 28. 4:07:52 29. 4:12:09 30. 4:15:39 31. 4:24:02 32. 4:38:43
33. 4:41:07 34. 4:47:53 35. 5:05:04 36. 5:10:17 37. 5:26:00 38. 5:43:37
I pinned the chapter tracks to the top of the comment thread the day I uploaded this.
I think you can choose a permanent top comment, so it stays there.
...I did pin it. The day I uploaded it.
4:15:39 Ch 30
2:33:52 ch 19