Whenever I've checked amazon in the past they had no copies available. But just checked now and lo and behold there are copies going from a penny. Got one ordered. Looks like I'll be putting all those Edward Abbey books I had lined up on hold. Thanks for the heads up.
I've been trying to find a copy of A Flag for Sunrise for about two years to no avail. I read a great story somewhere out of Bear And His Daughter, but that book is equally elusive.
Not so much brave as too mapped to know better. No signs of gentrification as of yet but they're trying to class up Pumphreys by enforcing a dress code (no caps, no trackies). I doubt that's managed to lure the Osborne Road crowd though.
Aye mate a fellow geordie. I thought you would be as well, or maybe Scottish, when you wrote "daft" in your message. Never really hear southerners or yanks saying it.
I've confounded many a bigg market patron in my time by yelling "I am Arturo Bandini!" in crowded pubs.
Thanks for your reply. Funnily enough Class was the first text I looked at when trying to find the quote. While the one you've shared isn't the one I've been looking for, it's still very insightful and will also be of use in the piece I'm trying to write. If that letter was published could you...
Oh aye that Dog Soldiers. I never saw it but but I remember when it came out everyone I knew was dead excited about it because one of the characters is a geordie (or so I was told). I think I'll have to give it a watch now you've uploaded it.
If you can find a copy, check out Tattoo by Earl Thompson. It's long since out of print but well worth the search. It's definitely a read Bukowski fans would enjoy. I even think Buk himself would have liked it.
Hello fellow Bukowskinistas! I'm trying to find the source of a Buk passage I read a few years ago. Can't place it on any of his books that I own. The passage concerns the act of writing, and compares it to boxing. If I remember rightly he envisions the typewriter as an opponent that you have to...