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SLOUCHING TOWARD NIRVANA: NEW

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SLOUCHING TOWARD NIRVANA: NEW POEMS BY

CHARLES BUKOWSKI PDF

Slouching Toward Nirvana: New Poems By Charles Bukowski When composing can change your life, when writing can enhance you by providing much money, why do not you try it? Are you still quite confused of where getting the ideas? Do you still have no concept with exactly what you are going to write? Now, you will certainly require reading Slouching Toward Nirvana: New Poems By Charles Bukowski An excellent author is a great user simultaneously. You can specify just how you compose depending on what publications to read. This Slouching Toward Nirvana: New Poems By Charles Bukowski could aid you to address the trouble. It can be among the ideal resources to develop your composing ability.

From Booklist

Bukowski's posthumous productivity continues, this time giving us one of his best collections, thanks for which are perhaps due to the editorial labors of John Martin, who closed down his long-running Black Sparrow Press a few years back but maintained his interest in his meat-and-potatoes author. Like many another Buk collection, this one comes in four parts. To see just how good it is, turn to part 2, indicatively introduced by these lines: "There's a lioness / down the hallway // put on your lion's mask / and wait." The section's theme is women: Buk's women, lioness-like, indeed. Approach with caution or, better, as he says, wait. Beauty or, like Buk, beast, each is as sexy, feisty, crude, and smart (sometimes) as he is. These seemingly artless (you try to write anything good in Bukowski's dribble-down-the-page free style) rants, matched here in force and humor by the ones not about women, are the poetic analogs of the man-woman stuff in the pages of tough-guy novelists from Spillane and Thompson^B to Leonard. Ray Olson

Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

About the Author

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SLOUCHING TOWARD NIRVANA: NEW POEMS BY

CHARLES BUKOWSKI PDF

in this place

there are the dead, the deadly and the dying.

there is the cross, the builders of the cross and the burners of the

cross.

the pattern of my life forms like a cheap shadow

on the wall before me.

and the happiest are those gifted with the

shortest journey.

Dimensions: 9.00" h x .72" w x 6.00" l, .87 pounds

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About the Author

Charles Bukowski is one of America’s best-known contemporary writers of poetry and prose and, many would claim, its most influential and imitated poet. He was born in 1920 in Andernach, Germany, to an American soldier father and a German mother, and brought to the United States at the age of two. He was raised in Los Angeles and lived there for over fifty years. He died in San Pedro, California, on March 9, 1994, at the age of seventy-three, shortly after completing his last novel, Pulp.

Most helpful customer reviews

9 of 11 people found the following review helpful. Buk at his best

By Keith Nichols

Most poets are struggling to get anything published and can hardly afford to send out less than their best work; so I have to marvel at a poet who intentionally holds back his best for publication after his death. But that's apparently what Bukowski did. I'm curious how many more poems he marked for posthumous release, but I'm not aware if John Martin has said. At any rate, the current batch is topnotch Bukowski and essential to any collection of his work.

In the past, one of my pleasures on finding a new Bukowski volume was to note the author photo, which changed from book to book. Now I get the impression that the official photo will be that of of the more avuncular-looking, white-haired Buk wearing his old-man windbreaker and gazing benignly at the camera.

13 of 14 people found the following review helpful. Slouching Toward Greatness

By Foster Corbin

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attending them, and hates most movies, particularly those that win awards. ("Academy Award?", page 86.)

Two or three character sketches of Richard Corey types are included here-- a Harry Keel person, "admired and feared" in school who years later turns up as a down-and-out salesman and Dale Thorpe ("golden boy"), envied from afar in high school but who has since disappeared-- and a moving poem about a kid who, after the bullies beat him up daily at school, must endure the wrath of his mother because his clothes are ruined ("clothes cost money").

As do all good poets, Mr. Bukowski achieves much with little-- often with biting humor: "is what's good for the goose sometimes only good for the/goose?" he asks. And he beautifully contrasts youth and old age in "beach boys."

I watch the young boys on their surfboards slim strong bodies gliding

some of them will end up in the madhouse some of them will gain 80 pounds

some of them will commit suicide

most of them will eventually stop coming to the beach.

The poet, who says we are all "museums of fear," eloquently describes his feelings in "with his awful teeth," describing "this dog Sadness," who is a "persistent mongrel."

There are literally dozens of similar passages in this collection that you will return to again and again.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Can't Beat the Buk

By A. Johnson

For a guy who's been dead since 1994, Charles Bukowski is an amazingly prolific sort. This is the 13th posthumous work to come from the Buk since his death and it's subtitled "new poems."

The Buk never claimed to be the best person, the best lover, the best writer, the best anything; although I'm sure that at different times and with plenty of beer in him he put forward some extravagant claims of other kinds. I love him, and many, many regular people who feel similarly do so because, I think, he was honest, unsentimental and a great lover of humanity in his poems--even when he is castigating humanity for its ugliness. It's precisely this breadth, which I would call Whitmanesque in its strange multiplicity, that continues to amaze.

These are far from his best poems, but there are some gems in here. Bukowski was the kind of poet of which there were and are few to none--a populist who wanted to be left alone, a lonely man who wasn't alone, a craftsman of the finest stamp, somebody who, like Hemingway, got the true words down on paper and knew how to leave it there. There are poems here about the usual Buk concerns: Women, drinking, the track, love, impending death, other writers, fame, bars, working horrible jobs, starving, starving, drinking and writing in boardinghouses; his close and unforgiving (yet deeply sympathetic) portraits of other people trying to push the dharma wheel a few inches forward, usually failing.

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SLOUCHING TOWARD NIRVANA: NEW POEMS BY

CHARLES BUKOWSKI PDF

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From Booklist

Bukowski's posthumous productivity continues, this time giving us one of his best collections, thanks for which are perhaps due to the editorial labors of John Martin, who closed down his long-running Black Sparrow Press a few years back but maintained his interest in his meat-and-potatoes author. Like many another Buk collection, this one comes in four parts. To see just how good it is, turn to part 2, indicatively introduced by these lines: "There's a lioness / down the hallway // put on your lion's mask / and wait." The section's theme is women: Buk's women, lioness-like, indeed. Approach with caution or, better, as he says, wait. Beauty or, like Buk, beast, each is as sexy, feisty, crude, and smart (sometimes) as he is. These seemingly artless (you try to write anything good in Bukowski's dribble-down-the-page free style) rants, matched here in force and humor by the ones not about women, are the poetic analogs of the man-woman stuff in the pages of tough-guy novelists from Spillane and Thompson^B to Leonard. Ray Olson

Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

About the Author

Charles Bukowski is one of America’s best-known contemporary writers of poetry and prose and, many would claim, its most influential and imitated poet. He was born in 1920 in Andernach, Germany, to an American soldier father and a German mother, and brought to the United States at the age of two. He was raised in Los Angeles and lived there for over fifty years. He died in San Pedro, California, on March 9, 1994, at the age of seventy-three, shortly after completing his last novel, Pulp.

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