An LA Times article from 1987 says he was eating a lot of fish at that point. And expensive wine. I have to think, though, that he had hotdogs at the race track.
In one of the Naropa University recordings of Ginsburg, one of his classes on poetry there, he comments on Bukowski. He liked Buk's use of narrative in poetry, says it's rare now for poems to tell stories. But didn't think Buk was great at including enough detail in poems to make the poems come...
Magic Mountain, Thomas Mann
Under the Volcano, Malcolm Lowry
A Confederacy of Dunces, John Kennedy O'Toole
Collected Stories of Lydia Davis
What Matters Most is How Well You Walk Through the Fire, Bukowski
I have to say that reading Bukowski has given me an appetite for more poetry in general and in particular for the confessional, straightforward kind that I like in Buk. I've started reading Kim Addonizio thanks to the recs in this thread, a friend turned me on to David Kirby whose poems also...
Just got Lydia Davis's Collected Stories. Have really enjoyed reading her so far. Short shorts/flash fiction. They read a bit like confessional prose poems.
In "the rock" in Bone Palace Ballet, Bukowski mentions a poet - though not by name - whom he read and found to be powerful, but then read the poet's correspondence which basically showed the guy was an ass kisser and lacked integrity. Does anyone know who he might be referring to there? I'm...
I'm really glad there's this forum. I watched Born Into This and was so pumped I loaned my copy to a friend. (hope he returns it.)
Now I want to read all the posts here. I'm relatively new to Bukowski. I'd heard about him from my friend (the one with my dvd) but hadn't been interested in...