What makes Bukowski so unique?
His persona dominates the voice in his work. Not fair to separate the persona from the work. And what makes his work compelling is truly subjective, but for me it's his deadpan confessional style, his fatalism, his "bad" attitudes, his functional & unrepentant alcoholism, his bravado, his humour, his willingness to show his soft sides and weaknesses, his confessions of loss & rejections, and his overall misanthropic view of humanity.
His actual writing style, the craft of how he laid down the lines, is known as workman-like. Simple, direct, and un-pretentious. Like a security-related incident report with colourful feelings & remarks allowed to remain.
Buk really did not belong to any movement other than the Cult of Bukowski.
He can be classified as a mid to late 20th Century, non-academic writer, poet, and novelist, and that's about it, really. He didn't join any particular wave with regards to style & substance. He wasn't doing the Beat thing (Jazz, mysticism, enlightenment, skiving, etc). He was a working-class alcoholic agnostic who was usually employed full time until the age of 50. His biggest influence was Fante and that dude weren't no literary darling or beatnik, he was in fact an outsider, an independant, a dude with heart writing with spirit and doing it unpretentiously; laying it down without trying to appear clever or fancy.
Yes.
In summary, Bukowski's work is unique because Bukowski was unique. Only 1 Bukowski per temporary world regardless of how long that world may last. Only 1 Kinision. Only 1 Bogosian or Hicks or Hendrix or Vai. And only 1 Newport, too.
Uh-huh.
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