New Ecco paperback covers (July 2014) and new collections (July 2015)

According to Jim amazon Ecco will release at least Ham on Rye, Post Office and Women with a new cover design in 2014. Anybody got more info on this?

ecco_covers_2014.jpg
 

bospress.net

www.bospress.net
Well now. Aren't those perfectly generic and cliche.

I really hope that this is a joke. I'm still pissed that they went away from the Barbara Martin designs which were great, but these NEON covers could have been designed as a joke...

Bill
 
Wow, those are fucking horrible. I'm sure they're no joke but the designs are more evocative of downtown Las Vegas than
Los Angeles. Perhaps they're for e-books. Either way, truly shitty.
 

mjp

Founding member
I'm told that there are going to be some new poetry collections from Ecco too, the first installment coming very soon.

Good: not edited by John Martin (ring the alarm, let the rejoicing begin).
Bad: the collections are arranged thematically.

I wish they weren't doing the collections thematically (each book covers only one "theme" - meaning, "Here's a whole collection of poems about writing," "Here's a whole collection of poems about drinking," etc.), but something done completely ass-backward stupid wrong is better than nothing I suppose.
 

Black Swan

Abord the Yorikke!
The Best of Bukowski, next to Garth Brooks, Creedence and Elvis, at Walmart, by the Pot of Gold stand.
Those covers are really bad.
 

LickTheStar

Sad Flower in the Sand
I can't wait to... face out the books on the shelf so that the image displays correctly?

Ugh. I'm going to finish vomiting and maybe I'll just have been drunk this whole time.

This is what happens when you let blind people design book covers...
 

Bukfan

"The law is wrong; I am right"
Bad: the collections are arranged thematically.

Oh no! Then we'll see poetry collections on women, drinking, horse racing, shitty jobs, being down and out, cars, rooming houses, L.A., abusive parents, writing, etc. and maybe even on vomitting and hangovers too. :rolleyes: I'm sure the ones on drinking and women will be popular and the perfect gift for some people.
 
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mjp

Founding member
Yes, I'm afraid so. That's the plan, anyway.

One of the good things about all of the other collections is if you don't particularly care for, say, poems about horse racing, they were sprinkled in among the rest of the poems. But an entire Bukowski collection on one theme - I don't know, man. I think it's a big mistake. It's only going to fuel the fire of those who enjoy pointing out Bukowski's weaknesses.

The only saving grace will be the absence of Martin's "editing."

And the fact that there probably will not be a horse racing collection...
 

d gray

tried to do his best but could not
Founding member
Good: not edited by John Martin (ring the alarm, let the rejoicing begin).

but will some still be collected from posthumous versions/collections - i.e. still martinized?
 

hank solo

Just practicin' steps and keepin' outta the fights
Moderator
Founding member
Yeah, what d gray said sounds likely to me. :nw:
 

Bukfan

"The law is wrong; I am right"
That's relief, and it'll be nice to read some previously uncollected poems.
But an entire Bukowski collection on one theme - I don't know, man. I think it's a big mistake. It's only going to fuel the fire of those who enjoy pointing out Bukowski's weaknesses.
Collection on drinking and women will certainly help keeping Bukowski's "dirty old man" public image alive. He'll probably never be able to escape that image, but why keep promoting it? Of course, the reason is as always - money!
 
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The only saving grace will be the absence of Martin's "editing."

And the fact that there probably will not be a horse racing collection...
I'd probably buy two copies of a horse racing collection...just sayin'. Horsemeat is among my favorite publications, and not just for the production of the book itself, but for the material. Very strong, in my opinion.

On another note, a collection about hemorrhoids and yellow piss-birds could be entertaining. The great Mr. Puchinski indeed!
 
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I have two Buk books that I bought in Italy that are theme based. One is called "Il Crimine Paga Sempre" and it is all poems about sickness and death and being in the hospital. The other is called "Quando Eravamo Giovani" and has only poems about youth and the schoolyard beatings and whatnot. Both are good to read occasional poems out of, but to read through the book gets kind of repetitive. Two decent choices for subjects, though.
 

mjp

Founding member
I'd probably buy two copies of a horse racing collection...just sayin'. Horsemeat is among my favorite publications, and not just for the production of the book itself, but for the material. Very strong, in my opinion.
I guess when I think of "horse racing poems" I think of the awful, tedious lists of numbers and how he arrived at them that he put into poetry form from time to time. But even the poems about the people at the track get a bit samey, if you feel me, yo. I get it - all the men are dead inside and all the women around the bar are whores. Okay. Next.

Not to necessarily single out the horse racing poems. I think a hundred Bukowski poems in a row on a single topic is going to be tedious no matter what the topic is. I guess I just don't understand how that was ever considered to be a good idea.

But then most people probably don't sit down with poetry collections and read them straight through like some of us might. So as something that you pick up every few days or once a week (or month) and read a few poems from, I suppose it could work.

Not for me, but for them.
 
But as I posted in another thread, Buk is able to write about the same situation in a freshly imaginative way nearly all the time. To me, the subject matter is often irrelevant; it's how the story is told that makes it work. Publish a book by Buk w/ 100 poems on how melted cheese on a dinner plates wrecks your kitchen sponge and it would probably be good.

But I agree that the thematic concept is a big swing and miss. Part of the intrigue gets ripped away when you know more than you should about what's around the corner. And I also agree that this approach will likely advance the tired clichés about him rather than advancing any true respect or acknowledgement of how he contributed to the art of poetry. But yes, new material is a good thing if you consider the alternative.
 
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The "funny" thing is that over the past several years, I read about half of many of the posthumous volumes so I would retain a pool of unread Buk for a few more years. Needless to say, that plan didn't turn out quite as I'd expected. Now I have another chance to squirrel away some stuff.
 
[...] doing the collections thematically (each book covers only one "theme" [...]
what will they do with all those millions of poems, where he is drinking AND fucking? vomiting AND listening to classical music? thinking about suicide AND literature AND Van Gogh ........
These will have to be included in more than one collection.

[...] when I think of "horse racing poems" [...]
now THIS collection has been done already, as we know. It's called 'Horsemeat' and is not too bad.
 

mjp

Founding member
Horsemeat was only 20 poems though, and they were broken up by photos. I think there's a big difference between that and a thick book full of of track poems. But it's probably a moot point anyway.

Unless Abel - um, I mean the guy who is editing the collections - decides to talk about them, we'll just have to wait and see.
 

Bukfan

"The law is wrong; I am right"
Abel is certainly not the worst editor one can think of and he's a godsend compared to the person who changed the poems in the posthumous collections. At least Abel would never do a thing like that and he knows more about Bukowski than most of us do.
 
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d gray

tried to do his best but could not
Founding member
Abel is certainly not the worst editor one can think of and he's a godsend compared to the person who changed the poems in the posthumous collections. At least Abel would never do a thing like that and he knows more about Bukowski than most of us do.

i just meant whether Abel was able to provide any production insights...

he typed, not holding his breath...
 
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it's alright, gray: we all know you did it only for the sake of the wordplay. Somebody had to do it anyway, so thanks that we can go on now.
 

d gray

tried to do his best but could not
Founding member
i just wanted to clarify that i wasn't doubting Abel being an able editor...
 
I haven't purchased his book, but have read excerpts and some essays and they always seem to be on point.
Actually seems to like Bukowski's work. What a concept...
 

mjp

Founding member
Before he was a famous academic writer, Abel was one of the founding fathers of this very forum that you are currently marinating in.

On this page you can see that he (cirerita) is historically the 11th most active poster here, and many of those 3,544 posts were in the Unpublished and Uncollected forum. He has probably done more research on Bukowski than anyone else walking around on this earth.

So even if you don't know him, you owe him.


See that? Poetry, bitches.
 
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