For decades, Jack Kerouac’s most famous work has existed in two forms. The book readers know, and the scroll that most people have only heard about. Now, that original scroll is stepping back into public view. The 37-metre-long typewritten draft of ‘On the Road’ is set to be auctioned in New York this March, and literary historians are paying close attention. Typed in a restless three-week burst in April 1951, the scroll captures Kerouac before edits, before polish, before restraint. It is raw, fast, and reportedly closest to what he actually wanted to say. Experts say artefacts like this rarely surface, and when they do, they reopen old debates about art, ownership, and who gets to decide where cultural history belongs.
What makes Kerouac’s original scroll so different from the published book
The scroll itself is almost as famous as the book. Kerouac taped together long sheets of tracing paper so he wouldn’t have to pause to change pages. Just words flowing, one after another. Heather Weintraub, books and manuscripts specialist at Christie’s, reported that the scroll is “unique and hugely important”. She described it as the only original draft of Kerouac’s masterpiece, and widely viewed as the most iconic physical object linked to the Beat Generation. What’s striking is how different it is from the version published in 1957.
Why the On the Road scroll being auctioned still matters today
Experts say it offers rare insight into Kerouac’s spontaneous prose method, something he spoke about often but few could truly see until this document surfaced. It isn’t just a draft but evidence of a way of thinking. That’s why the scroll’s appearance at auction feels significant. Around 400 items from the collection will be displayed free to the public at Christie’s Rockefeller Plaza galleries from 6 to 12 March.Alongside the Kerouac scroll, the sale includes Paul McCartney’s handwritten lyrics for Hey Jude, documents linked to the Beatles’ break-up, handwritten Rocky notes by Sylvester Stallone, and a journal kept by Jim Morrison.
Who should own the ‘On the Road’ scroll
This isn’t the first time the Kerouac scroll has stirred controversy. When it was last sold in 2001, Carolyn Cassady, the former wife of Neal Cassady, criticised the sale sharply. She called it “blasphemy”.
