LickTheStar
Sad Flower in the Sand
I would agree that the world doesn't need another review of Women, especially one as half-assed as the one presented.
Tony comes across like he wanted to make a late pc-statement (is anyone still using the term? me, okay) and picked up Bukowski to dismiss the sexist, macho filth he would have found elsewhere better, for his cause.
I don't think the world absolutely needs a new review of Women but a blogger is free to write on any book he wants, whether current or old. I also don't think that "living, breathing writers" lack exposure. And I'm not sure these latter deserve any exposure at all, at least a huge part of them. Sincerely, I prefer to read an umpteenth review of Women, even a negative one, than the review of a worthless brand new book.The point is Bukowski and Twain are long dead, and "reviewing" their books takes a review away from a new book, by, oh, say, a living, breathing writer who needs the exposure.
There's that.
Does the world need a new "review" of Women? That's a rhetorical question. The answer is; no, the world does not. Just because someone "discovered" Bukowski yesterday, or has always had a Bukowski chip on their shoulder and needs a "review" to air it is not a valid reason to review a book.
I don't believe that all the readers of this review reacted like the few people who wrote comments. ;)It doesn't matter anyway. Look at the comments under that "review." A bunch of imbeciles who never read Bukowski have now had their prejudices confirmed. So what does that accomplish? That's also a rhetorical question.
You'd be surprised how many people in California are "totally disabled." And it was probably easier to qualify 30+ years ago than it is now.ATD was a fund for the 'totally disabled' in California during the '60s and '70s. I don't think that's it.
Indeed, at the end of the 1960s, California and New York, moving rapidly toward an emphasis on community care, began to use the federal-state welfare program Aid to the Disabled (ATD, 1950-1974) to support indigent alcoholics and addicts in local settings much as it provided a non-institutional subsistence to poor persons with severe mental illness.