A Bukowski line that made you laugh out loud!

I was pretty young when I started reading Bukowski and I really didn't get a lot of the humor that he put down. As I get older, read more and lurk on this forum I can see it a bit more clearly. Hopefully.
 
The first line that comes to mind which makes me laugh just thinking about it is from the end of post office when buk explains the trapping season and when asked what he does the line goes into italics and reads trap!
 

mjp

Founding member
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Sometimes I laugh when something is just so damn good.
 

justine

stop the penistry
from Factotum (chinaski is having a conversation with manny the young chicano):

"a woman is a full-time job. you have to choose your profession."
"i suppose there is an emotional drain."
"physical too. they want to fuck night and day."
"get one you like to fuck."
"yes, but if you drink or gamble they think it's a put-down of their love."
"get one who likes to drink, gamble and fuck."
"who wants a woman like that?"
 

Bukfan

"The law is wrong; I am right"
LOL... I've always loved that piece of dialogue...:D
 
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the only good poet

One retreat after another without peace.
"Not many people in the world had very much money but the less money they had the better they seemed to live."
 
'My father's funeral was a cold hamburger'

from - Hot Water Music, The death of the father pt:1.

Quality line....ridiculous! But it gave me a laugh....and there are sooo many funny lines....we could be here a long long time.

:D
 
I feel for the lonely, I sence their need, but I also feel
that they should all
comfort each other and leave me alone.
 
"Evil evil evil man! You came here to rape me!"
"Look lady, let me by."
"THERE IS EVIL WRITTEN ALL OVER YOUR FACE!"
"Don't you think I know that? Now let me out of here!"

"The blacks love me here, Feathers. I have fooled them."
"The blacks love you?"
"They give me water. I even fuck their women. Or try to."

"YOU DON'T SMELL FIRE," I yelled, "YOU SMELL SMOKE!"
Post Office, lines whatever

One night I was drunker than usual. I refused to punch in. "This is it," I told them.

The Elf was in trauma. "How will we make it, Chinaski?"

"Ah."

"Give us one more night!"

I got his head in the crook of my arm, squeezed; his ears turned pink. "Little bastard," I said. Then I let him go.

Factotum
 
M

MULLINAX

1) "He told me to get the hell out of there."
"I got the hell out of there".

2) "Nobody makes stew like you do. It's your greatest talent".
"Thanks a hell of a lot". (Barfly?)

3) "I could see the headlines: 'Man abuses young girl and sells her body to bums'". (the plane ride to New York with Cupcakes)

4) "Noble warrior, there's nothing but space between us". (the janitor scene at the LA Times building.

5) "Well, we were late because we had to baptise a dog". (from somewhere)

6) "I threw the mail onto the robes, took a swig of holy wine, sat down on the crapper and smoked a cigarette in the dark". (Post Office)

and many, many more...
 

number6horse

okyoutwopixiesoutyougo
from a P.S. in "Letters/1958-1965"

no man is an island
but why are so many of them
flecks of dirt ?

and from the poem "Back To The Machine Gun" :

...the night harness races will have to wait...
 
M

MULLINAX

What is this "Letters/1958-1965"? Sounds like something I want.
 

number6horse

okyoutwopixiesoutyougo
"Charles Bukowski : Selected Letters, Volume 1: 1958-1965"
edited by Seamus Cooney
first published in 2004
Virgin Books Ltd.

It is a great read and a great peek inside the head of Buk. (Gotta run right now, but will write more later tonight.)
 

hank solo

Just practicin' steps and keepin' outta the fights
Moderator
Founding member
What is this "Letters/1958-1965"? Sounds like something I want.

I believe that the Virgin Books 'Selected Letters' present in 4 volumes the same letters collected in the 3 Black Sparrow books 'Screams from the Balcony', 'Living on Luck' and 'Reach for the Sun'. Not sure if Virgin included any of the letters from 'Beerspit Night and Cursing' or 'The Bukowski / Purdy Letters' but I suspect they aren't included in those UK collections.
 

ROC

It is what it is
That's right... they are not. But they do put all the letters in order (unlike the BSP editions - but, then the BSP editions are nicer books).
 
M

MULLINAX

"Charles Bukowski : Selected Letters, Volume 1: 1958-1965"
edited by Seamus Cooney
first published in 2004
Virgin Books Ltd.

It is a great read and a great peek inside the head of Buk. (Gotta run right now, but will write more later tonight.)

Thanks. That's the BRITISH edition, as opposed to what BS put out.
 
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