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salon.com > Books May 4, 1999 URL: http://www.salon.com/books/log/1999/05/04/beats The Beats order lunch A documentary captures the last meeting of Bowles, Burroughs and Ginsberg. In the fall of 1995, film director Jennifer Baichwal traveled to New York to meet with Paul Bowles, the author of "The Sheltering Sky," who was making his first trip to the United States in three decades. Baichwal, whose movie about Bowles, "Let It Come Down," drew warm reviews on its opening in New York last week, happened to catch a crucial moment of American literary history: the last meeting of three great Beat writers. Bowles, who is a composer as well as a novelist, had come from Tangiers to attend a festival of his music at Lincoln Center. His old pal William Burroughs flew in from his home in Lawrence, Kan., to join Bowles in his room in the Mayflower Hotel for lunch. Unexpectedly, Allen Ginsberg showed up, too. Poet and performing artist John Giorno also came along. After the four exchanged some gossip, the discussion inevitably turned to food. Baichwal briefly joined the negotiations, which she captured for her film: Ginsberg: So what's for lunch? Are we going to lunch? This was to be the last time the group got together; Burroughs and Ginsberg both died in 1997.
-- -- Craig Offman
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