The Continual Condition (pre-publication)

bospress.net

www.bospress.net
I just got the advance proof. The book is solid. REALLY SOLID.

I was happy and surprised to see that the full 20 poems of "as Buddha smiles" are included as one poem in 20 parts.

If there is interest, I'll list the table of contents.

Bill
 

bospress.net

www.bospress.net
Contents:

died 9 april 1553
thanks for the luck
my art form
rejected
full circle
the continual condition
let's have some fun
to kiss her long dark hair
waste
the recess bells of school
the wasted profession
the strange morning
feeling good in the new neighborhood
this kind of fire
unemployed
tough cob
the last race
my soul is gone
the theory
more than ow
dog times
I might get traded
faux pas
about a worried reader of my works:
the agnostic
a good place
the legend
you've seen it on the barstool next to you-
never
a hot sweaty day in August
news item
comeback
this flag not fondly waiving
mannequins
my answer
under the suckerfish sun
I am chastised
a fine madness
a consistent sort
the old movie star
trying to dry out
consummation
before the 7th race
morning after
heavy dogs in cement shoes
down the hatch
tragedy?
listening to the radio at 1:35 a.m.
perfect silence
mirror mirror on the wall
parts dept.
dear editor:
lack of a common interest
I'm upstairs now
as Buddha smiles
what have I seen?
a correspondent wrote bitterly:
moving toward age 73:
I saw a tramp last night
mountain of horror
bent
the last winter
bayonets in candlelight

Someone with more time on their hands than me could research these to see what mags some of these appeared in....

Bill
 

cirerita

Founding member
Many of those poems have been culled from Wormies and a few other littles from the 80s. Only 2-3 poems from the 60s. Five or six poems seem to have been previously published by BSP. Well, the titles are the same. But we know that doesn't mean much.

Too bad the book was not titled Bayonets in Candlelight.
 

bospress.net

www.bospress.net
Hi,
nope, I was not being the subliminal. I meant that only a few members here live in, or recently lived in Australia or NZ...

You'll love the new book.

Bill
 
I had marmite when I was in the UK back in '93. It's interesting that a nation so known for their cullinary expertise would gravitate to such a foul substance.
(That's sarcasm, folks.)

Imagine if Smucker's made yeasty polyurethane, and you've got Marmite. Great for high blood pressure too. But I imagine it would be desireable for book-binding.
 

mjp

Founding member
For what it's worth, everything with an asterisk was not previously in the database (so assumed to be previously uncollected), and I thought we had all the Wormwood stuff in there...

*Died 9 April 1553 (could be: D. April 9, 1553 / He Died April 9, 1553)
*thanks for the luck
*my art form
*rejected (could be: The Hell Of It Is To Throw Away Rejected Poems That Seem To Say Something Anyhow Even If Perhaps Not Too Well?)
full circle
*the continual condition
*let's have some fun
*to kiss her long dark hair
waste
*the recess bells of school
the wasted profession
*the strange morning
*feeling good in the new neighborhood (could be: The New Neighborhood?)
*this kind of fire
*unemployed (could be: Unemployed And Shacking?)
tough cob
*the last race
my soul is gone
*the theory
more than ow
*dog times
I might get traded
*faux pas
*about a worried reader of my works:
*the agnostic (could be: Agnostic?)
*a good place
*the legend
*you've seen it on the barstool next to you-
never
a hot sweaty day in August
(could be: A Sweaty Day In August?)
*news item
*comeback
*this flag not fondly waiving
*mannequins
*my answer
under the suckerfish sun
I am chastised

*a fine madness
*A Consistent Sort
the old movie star
*trying to dry out (could be: Drying Out?)
*consummation
*before the 7th race
morning after
*heavy dogs in cement shoes
*down the hatch
tragedy?
listening to the radio at 1:35 a.m.

*perfect silence
mirror mirror on the wall
parts dept.
(could be: The Parts Dept.?)
dear editor:
*Lack Of A Common Interest (could be: A Common Interest?)
*I'm upstairs now
*as Buddha smiles
*what have I seen?
*a correspondent wrote bitterly:
*moving toward age 73:
*I Saw A Tramp Last Night (BOSP)
*Mountain Of Horror (could be: A Horror Poem?)
bent
*The Last Winter (could be: My Last Winter?)
bayonets in candlelight
 

LickTheStar

Sad Flower in the Sand
Well that's good news, thanks for all the info folks...

The end of this year is going to be good for me.
 

HenryChinaski

Founding member
great! thanks for posting the table of contents and all the input from everybody. I cannot wait to get my hands on a copy of this. hopefully I can magically get a proof. *hint hint*
 

Hosh

hoshomccreesh.com
I got a chance to read about 1/2 of the book last weekend...the cover was pretty sharp, it's a thinner book than we're used to, but the poems are really there...really enjoyed the heck out of it. Can't wait to read the 2nd half!
 

bospress.net

www.bospress.net
Reading books and hitting on my wife when he should have been binding....

Bill

p.s. I can't fault the guy as he read at night after 18 hour days binding....
 

mjp

Founding member
...and you knew that after 18 hours of binding he couldn't follow through on any play for your wife...
 

Hosh

hoshomccreesh.com
I'm, like, a totally fast reader n' stuff...so, basically, that's why I only finished 1/2 the book...because, after hours at the lash, Heir Roberts gave me a bowl of gruel & a few moments to read.

As for the late-night plays...I admit I was very disappointed to find not Bill's wife but his visiting father-in-law sneaking around in my room at 3am...
 

Bukfan

"The law is wrong; I am right"
Thanks for posting the cover and contents! It'look like we have something to look forward to...
 
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bospress.net

www.bospress.net
I'm, like, a totally fast reader n' stuff...so, basically, that's why I only finished 1/2 the book...because, after hours at the lash, Heir Roberts gave me a bowl of gruel & a few moments to read.

As for the late-night plays...I admit I was very disappointed to find not Bill's wife but his visiting father-in-law sneaking around in my room at 3am...

if only that were a joke.... The old man was staying with us and he sleepwalks.

Those aren't pillows....

Bill
 

cirerita

Founding member
First review, via Publishers Weekly:
Sex, self-disgust, horse racing, literary fame and obscurity, delight in foul language ("dry and ridiculous bungholes"), and fleeting but genuine pleasures (from voyeurism to eating a spider crab): Bukowski's many, many remaining fans will find familiar themes in this 12th set of previously unpublished poems to appear since the Los Angeles writer died in 1994. "The god-damned editors don't know anything," he tells "the lady on the couch," and indeed he insists on the life, the meat, of the poems. Short lines dominate this particular cull of verse, with plenty of quoted conversation mixed in; as with most of his work, misanthropy rules, making the flashes of mercy--and of sexual acceptance-shine bright indeed: "I was/ sick and I/turned to look out the/window/ white yellow grease of/ morning/ burning my/eyes./ Next to me in bed/ there she was." The poems may repeat themselves, but they stay true to Bukowski. Few people would want to trade places with this poet for whom "pain sits, pain floats, pain/ waits;/ pain is," but plenty will continue to cherish his unpretentious words.
 

Ponder

"So fuck Doubleday Doran"
RIP
26 dollars??
Oh I get it, hardcover version.
I didn't know they have printed a HC edition.
 
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