In later years, Burroughs did not consider
And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks worth retrieving from obscurity. In the 1986 documentary
What Happened to Kerouac? he dismissed it as "not a distinguished work." According to
James Grauerholz, numerous attempts were made by Kerouac and others to get the book published, until Burroughs brought a lawsuit over the use of quotations from the manuscript that appeared in
New York magazine in 1976; the suit, which was settled in the 1980s, established the ownership of the work. When Burroughs died in 1997, Grauerholz became the executor of his estate, with responsibility for the disposition of his unpublished works. He had befriended Lucien Carr and agreed not to publish the manuscript in Carr's lifetime, although an excerpt from the book was included in the 1997 Burroughs omnibus
Word Virus, published by Grove after the writer's death (but approved by Burroughs before he died). Carr's death in 2005 made way for the complete book to be published at last.
Penguin Books published the novel in November 2008. An American edition was published by
Grove Press. Ian Pindar, writing for
The Guardian, agreed with Burroughs' assessment about the book but said "Neither Burroughs nor Kerouac is at his best here, but
Hippos has value as a testament to their latent talent." The review said "The best thing about this collaboration between Jack Kerouac and William S. Burroughs is its gruesomely comic title". Although not based upon the novel, the 2013 film release
Kill Your Darlings re-creates the events leading up to the murder that inspired the book. ==References==