
The title say it all, and I’ve got a lot of ground to cover so let’s just get on with it!
- Burroughs was born on February 5, 1914, which would make him 100 years old today!
- But he passed away on August 2, 1997
- The S. in William S. Burroughs stands for Seward
- Burroughs is actually Burroughs II
- Burroughs’ father’s name was Mortimer Perry Burroughs
- Mortimer ran a gift shop called Cobblestone Gardens
- The II comes from his grandfather
- William Seward Burroughs I was the founder of the Burroughs Adding Machine company
- William S. Burroughs II named his son William Seward Burroughs III
- Burroughs’ mother’s name was Laura Hammon Lee
- Burroughs’ pen name was William Lee
- Burroughs’ maternal grandfather was a minister
- In the ’60s, Burroughs joined and left the Church of Scientology
- In 1993 he became a member of the Illuminates of Thanateros
- Laura Hammon Lee’s family claimed to be related to Confederate General Robert E. Lee
- Burroughs’ uncle was Ivy Lee, the founder of modern PR
- His family was not very affectionate
- He was born in St. Louis, Missouri and lived on Pershing Avenue in the Central West End section of St. Louis
- He attended the private school John Burroughs School, named after the naturalist
- Burroughs was class of ’31
- Burroughs’ first publishing achievement was at the school when his essay “Personal Magnetism” was published in 1929 in the John Burroughs Review
- He didn’t graduate from John Burroughs School
- On its website, John Burroughs School calls William S. Burroughs a “controversial author”
- After John Burroughs School, he attended Los Alamos Ranch School, an elite boarding school in New Mexico
- Another famous author later attended Los Alamos Ranch School: Gore Vidal (born 1925)
- At the boys boarding school, Burroughs kept a diary about his attachment to another boy at the school
- Burroughs was a virgin through high school
- Burroughs dropped out of Los Alamos too
- Next up, he went to Taylor School in Clayton, Missouri
- From there, he went to Harvard to study art
- At Harvard, he was part of Adams House
- Back home on summer break, Burroughs became a cub reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- His beat? Police docket
- Surprisingly, he hated the job and refused to cover gruesome stories
- That summer he lost his virginity
- He shed his virginity to a female prostitute
- It was back at Harvard that he was introduced to gay culture when he traveled to New York City with his wealthy Kansas City friend Richard Stern
- Stern was apparently a bit like Neal Cassady when it came to driving: he drove so fast that Burroughs wanted to get out of the car once
- Burroughs graduated from Harvard in 1936
- After he graduated, his parents gave him $200 a month
- After Harvard, Burroughs went to Vienna to study medicine
- There he became involved in the gay subculture
- He also met his first wife there, Ilse Klapper, a Jewish woman fleeing the Nazis
- Burroughs and Klapper were not romantically involved, but he married her in Croatia so she could move to the US
- After they divorced in New York, they remained friends
- By 1939, he had become so obsessed with a man that he severed his own finger — the last joint of his left little finger, to be exact
- In 1942, Burroughs enlisted in the US Army
- When he became depressed that he was listed as 1-A Infantry instead of officer, his mother called a family friend, a neurologist, to get him a civilian disability discharge due to mental instability
- It took five months for him to be discharged, and he waited at Jefferson Barracks, near his family home
- Afterward, he moved to Chicago
- In Chicago, the Harvard grad became an exterminator
- The Burroughs family was friends with another prominent family, the Carrs
- William S. Burroughs II was eleven years old when Lucien Carr was born
- During primary school in St. Louis, Burroughs had met David Kammerer, who was three years older than him
- Kammerer had been Carr’s youth group leader and become obsessed with him, following him to the University of Chicago
- When Carr fled to Columbia University in New York City, Kammerer followed — as did Burroughs, who moved a block away from Kammerer in the West Village
- Carr met Allen Ginsberg at Columbia and introduced him to Burroughs and Carr
- Burroughs met Joan Vollmer Adams around this time, and he moved in with her
- In the summer of ’44, Carr killed Kammerer with his Boy Scout knife, and then went to Burroughs — Kammerer’s friend — for help
- Burroughs flushed Kammerer’s bloody pack of cigarettes down the toilet and told Carr to get a lawyer and turn himself in, but instead Carr sought out help from Jack Kerouac
- Burroughs and Kerouac were arrested as material witnesses, but Burroughs’ father posted bail for him (Kerouac married Edie Parker to get bail money)
- Burroughs became involved in drugs around this time, becoming addicted to heroin
- When Burroughs got arrested for forging a prescription, he was released to his parents in St. Louis
- When he was finally allowed to leave, he went back to New York City for Joan Vollmer Adams, and together, with her daughter, moved to Texas
- It was Joan who gave birth to William S. Burroughs III in 1947
- After Texas, the family moved to New Orleans
- Around this time, Burroughs was arrested after police found letters at Ginsberg’s place that incriminated him
- Burroughs, Joan, and the kids went on the lam to Mexico
- In Mexico, Burroughs decided to go back to school: he studied Spanish and the Mayan language at Mexico City College
- He studied under R. H. Barlow, a homosexual from Kansas City who commit suicide through overdose in January 1951
- He also decided to take up a game of William Tell. It didn’t go so well: he shot Joan in the head, killing her
- He only spent 13 days in jail, after his brother bribed authorities to let him out while he waited for trial; witnesses were also bribed so Burroughs would appear innocent. Either way, Burroughs skipped town
- Burroughs considers his killing of Joan to be the beginning of his life as a writer; he wrote Queer at this time
- Queer was not published until 1985; Burroughs’ first book was actually Junkie, published in 1953 — four years before Kerouac’s On the Road came out
- Burroughs III went to live with his grandparents in St. Louis; Joan’s daughter, Julie, went to live with her maternal grandmother
- Burroughs himself went down to South America in search of the drug yage
- From there, he moved to Palm Beach, Florida, with his parents
- His parents paid for him to travel to Rome to see Alan Ansen
- They didn’t hit it off romantically, so Burroughs left for Tangier, Morocco
- When Kerouac visited Burroughs in Tangier in 1957, he typed up his manuscript for him and edited it into Naked Lunch
- In 1959, Burroughs moved to the Beat Hotel in Paris; Ginsberg, Ginsberg’s lover poet Peter Orlovsky, poet Gregory Corso, and photographer Harold Chapman lived there
- There, he discovered the cut-up technique of Brion Gysin, which greatly influenced his work
- In 1966, Burroughs went to London to seek treatment for his drug addiction and worked there for about six years
- Student editor Irving Rosenthal, of Chicago Review, lost his job for publishing excerpts of Naked Lunch and founded his own lit mag, Big Table, where he continued to publish Burroughs’ work. The United States Postmaster General found the work so obscene that he ruled it couldn’t be sent through the mail. This intrigued Maurice Girodias, publisher of Olympia Press
- A 1966 case against Naked Lunch remains the United States’ last obscenity trial against literature
- Back in the US, Burroughs’ own son had gotten involved in drugs and gotten arrested on prescription fraud (just like dear old dad); Burroughs took him to the Lexington Narcotics Farm and Prison
- Burroughs covered the 1968 Democratic National Convention for Esquire magazine; he refused to alter his style to fit Playboy‘s literary demands for another article
- Burroughs hated teaching because it expended all his energy and he felt like he got nothing back in return
- Bookseller James Grauerholz initiated Burroughs’ reading tour, which helped Burroughs remain in the public eye … and make money for it
- In 1976, Burroughs’ son had liver cirrhosis and underwent transplant surgery; Burroughs stayed with him in 76 and 77 to help care for him
- Burroughs III cut off his father, writing an article in Esquire that said his father had ruined his life, and died in 1981
- In 1978, the Nova Convention took place — a multi-venue retrospective of Burroughs’ work that included readings and discussions by Ginsberg, Patti Smith, Frank Zappa, and Timothy Leary in addition to concerts featuring The B-52s, Debbie Harry, and Philip Glass
- Speaking of musicians, in the 90s Kurt Cobain hung out with Burroughs
- In the 80s, Burroughs moved to Lawrence, Kansas, where he spent the remainder of his life
- Always the gun aficionado, there he created an art form in which he used a shotgun to shoot spray paint bottles that would explode paint onto a canvas
- In 1983 Burroughs was inducted into the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters
- He played a character from one of his own short stories in the 1989 film Drugstore Cowboy
- His collaboration with Nick Cave and Tom Waits gave birth to Smack My Crack, a collection of short prose and spoken-word album
- Burroughs died from complications of a heart attack
- He is buried the Burroughs family plot in Bellefontaine Cemetery
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