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         Bukowski Charles:     more books (100)
  1. War All the Time by Charles Bukowski, 2002-06-05
  2. Mockingbird Wish Me Luck by Charles Bukowski, 2002-06-05
  3. Charles Bukowski: Sunlight Here I Am: Interviews and Encounters 1963-1993 by David Stephen Calonne, 2003-01-01
  4. Beerspit Night and Cursing by Charles Bukowski, 2002-06-05
  5. Betting on the Muse by Charles Bukowski, 2002-06-05
  6. The Night Torn Mad With Footsteps by Charles Bukowski, 2007-08-28
  7. The Captain is Out to Lunch by Charles Bukowski, 2002-06-05
  8. Charles Bukowski by Barry Miles, 2009-12-23
  9. Open All Night by Charles Bukowski, 2002-06-05
  10. Erections, Ejaculations, Exhibitions and General Tales of Ordinary Madness by Charles Bukowski, 1975
  11. Charles Bukowski: Autobiographer, Gender Critic, Iconoclast by David Charlson, 2005-09-26
  12. All the Assholes in the World and Mine by Charles Bukowski, 2010-01-18
  13. Charles Bukowski: Laughing with the Gods by Fernanda Pivano, 2000-04-01
  14. Bukowski and the Beats: A Commentary on the Beat Generation by Jean-Francois Duval, 2002-04-01

61. Charles Bukowski Ate My Balls!
Inspired by the internationally famous Mr. T Ate My Balls Page! Read about charles bukowski s penchant for ball munching.
http://www.geocities.com/athens/forum/7762/
Nothing Better To Do Today Productions presents...
The Unofficial
Web Page! Inspired by the internationally famous Mr. T Ate My Balls Page!
After yet another 12 hours of ball-busting labor at the post office, Bukowski
finishes up one of his sex stories for an underground Los Angeles newspaper... Readers of Bukowski's story confuse his fictional account of cannibalism
as fact, not fiction.  Amused by the confusion, he plays along with
the public's perception of him as a testicle-eating wild man. Guests at Bukowski's bombed-out Hollywood apartment mistook a casual remark about courage as if he were trying to make a deal for his favorite afternoon snack! Bukowski was slow to realize the impact his imposture was
having on the reading public, especailly in Europe... In fact, some of his later work only reinforced the impression. Concerned by newspaper reports of testicle-eating at poetry readings,
Bukowski comes clean in a nationally televised performance. And even today, visitors to his final resting place are
reminded to not take Bukowski too seriously.

62. Charles Bukowski
A never before released recording of a 1974 poetry reading by world famous twentieth century American poet charles bukowski (19221993) is one you ll have
http://www.thetemplebookstore.com/bukcd.html
PO BOX 100, Walla Walla, WA The Temple Bookstore Buy Books View Cart Events ... Links
New Books By Charles Potts
The Yellow Christ: Valga Krusa Vol. 1 Laffing Water: Valga Krusa Vol. 2 Kiot The Portable Potts ... Compostrella/ Starfield
Charles Potts
Books in Print Across the North Pacific
Angio Gram

The Dictatorship of the Environment

Fascist Haikus
...
Potts Bio
Charles Potts
Out of Print Collectibles
Charle Kiot
The Opium Must Go Thru

Rocky Mountain Man

Valga Krusa
...
All Out of Print Collectibles
Select Search Engine... the Temple Bookstore Search The Web Powered by Rollyo Charles Bukowski the Underwater Poetry Festival - 1974 Produced by the Temple Inc. CD $10 order Charles Bukowski at the Underwater Poetry Festival - 1974 from thetemplebookstore.com orders outside the United States click here: A never before released recording of a 1974 poetry reading by world famous twentieth century American poet Charles Bukowski (1922-1993) is one you'll have to stuff in your CD player as soon as you get it. In 1974, the intrepid Bukowski journeyed from Los Angeles to Salt Lake City to give a featured reading at the Underwater Poetry Festival, along with Alta, Ricardo Sanchez, and Andy Clausen. The recording of the reading given in the social work auditorium of the University of Utah survived in the archives of the Reverend Sherm W. Clow, President at the time of the renowned Litmus Inc., producer of the festival. It includes more than twenty poems with a table of contents, some introductory and closing patter by MC Charles Potts, and a reproduction of the poster from the UPF are the menu on the CD. Bukowski was just beginning to achieve the lasting fame that would come to him in the next two decades. Hear the man at his droll and noteworthy best.

63. The Wondering Minstrels (poet)
1420, 5 Jan 2004, charles bukowski, Hemingway Never Did This, I read that he lost 31. 1623, 14 Feb 2005, Michelangelo Buonarroti, To The Supreme Being
http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/index_poet_B.html
The Wondering Minstrels
Main page Sorted on poet , letter B Date Poet Title Length 24 Apr 1999 Harivansh Rai Bachchan Madhushala (The Tavern) Seeking wine, the dr... 12 Mar 2002 Gerard Bacher Corsica (Before the Walk) 2 Apr 2002 Patrick Barrington The Diplomatic Platypus I had a duck-billed ... 14 Jan 2005 Patrick Barrington I Met a Lady in the Wood I met a lady in the wood. 14 May 2005 Patrick Barrington When I was Young and Ignorant When I was young and... 19 Dec 2004 Patrick Barrington I Had a Hippopotamus I had a hippopotamus... 29 Oct 2004 Patrick Barrington My Love is Theosophist My love is a Theosophist 20 Mar 2005 Patrick Barrington Battle Song There's havoc on the... 17 Oct 2005 Basavanna Vacana #105 A snake-charmer and ... 19 May 2003 Matsuo Basho Untitled The summer grasses 09 Apr 1999 Matsuo Basho Haiku scent of plum blossoms 24 Mar 2002 Matsuo Basho Matsushima O Matsushima! 6 Jun 2001 Matsuo Basho Haiku Snowy morning 05 Mar 1999 Matsuo Basho Haiku old pond..... 01 Sep 2000 Charles Baudelaire The Albatross Often to pass the ti... 20 Oct 2000 Charles Baudelaire Get Drunk!

64. Charles Bukowski At The Blue Neon Alley
charles bukowski at the Blue Neon Alley, a directory of the beat generation on the World Wide Web.
http://www.neonalley.org/bukowski.html
on the net!' - www.neonalley.org
Beat Generation
Jack kerouac Allen Ginsberg William Burroughs ... Lawrence Ferlinghetti Neon Alley Pages HOME Charles Bukowski Diane di Prima Anne Waldman ... Bob Kaufman, Jazz Poet of the Streets Search for poems: Poem Title Poem Text Poet Name by PoemHunter.Com Beat Era Jazz: Clifford Brown John Coltrane Miles Davis Dizzy Gillespie Dexter Gordon Coleman Hawkins Billie Holiday John Lewis Charles Mingus Thelonious Monk Charlie Parker Bud Powell Max Roach Art Tatum Ben Webster Lester Young Poems by Terry Young Animal Abuse San Francisco Blue Neon Alley Charles Bukowski
Selected Poems of Charles Bukowski 16-bit Intel 8088 chipi 8 Count A Challenge To The Dark A Following ... Marina Charles Bukowski Directory Charles Bukowski
@ "Fantastic Fiction" Charles Bukowski
An Introduction Charles Bukowski
Anti-Hero "Charles Bukowski"
The Great Poet Post Angelic Musing for
Charles Bukowski

@ Wikipedia Charles Bukowski
Selected Poems Charles Bukowski
Charles Bukowski
A Brief Bio Charles Bukowski Gesellschaft German Language "These Words I Write. . ."

65. PopMatters
One artist beloved of pomo hipsters who I ve alternately loved and hated is that strange soused old man of the American Century charles bukowski.
http://www.popmatters.com/columns/desrosiers/030115.shtml
@import url( http://www.popmatters.com/stylesubpage.css ); Features Columns Blogs News ... Media Center POMO AUDIT
On Fire Like Old Dry Garbage
[15 January 2003]
column archive
by Mark Desrosiers
Charles Bukowski and Pal
e-mail this article
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comment on this article
In moments of grouchy introspection, I've divided the cultural detritus of my world into two categories: (1) things tedious pomo hipsters love that I just can't stand; and (2) things tedious pomo hipsters love that I also love. In the first category I would include Will Oldham, Leonard Cohen, Thomas Pynchon, White Stripes, Jeff Koons, Tom Robbins, Nick Cave, Greil Marcus, Jacques Derrida, and Chloe Sevigny. One artist beloved of pomo hipsters who I've alternately loved and hated is that strange soused old man of the American Century: Charles Bukowski . He is the ugliest, drunkest, stinkiest, least complicated, wordiest, narstiest little poet this freedom-loving nation has ever offered the world (yeah, yeah, I know he was born in Germany, but they ain't claimin' him). Later, pretending to be jaded, world-weary, and misanthropic, I tired of Bukowski. All the most annoying hornrim hepcats I knew had his Black Sparrow Press books carefully displayed on their shelves, and you can tell they only took 'em down as a prop to seduce gullible girls. His poems struck me as repetitive and too straightforward. Maybe he was just a charlatan, a phony, a drunk hack! Certainly he was a one-trick pony. I mean, the poet-singing-in-his-cups act is as old as language itself, and John Berryman literally ran that shit into the ground with his boozy stop-start epics and knotty bearded voice-of-God recitations, culminating in a frigid reborn-Catholic suicide off the Washington Avenue Bridge.

66. Charles Bukowski Works
charles bukowski works. charles bukowski photo special thanks to eSMART;. bukowski.org.ua © 2006 email; designed by LeadingStudio.
http://bukowski.org.ua/

67. About The Huntington Library, Art Collections, And Botanical Gardens
With his typewriter, bottle of booze, and other writing tools, charles bukowski became one of the most original voices in 20thcentury American literature.
http://www.huntington.org/Information/bukowski.html

Charles Bukowski
Papers Donated
Poet, novelist, and cult figure,
in the good old days people just assumed that I
was crazy. life was simple then. all I need now is what I needed then: a desk lamp, the typer, the bottle, the radio, classical music, and this room on fire. published in Slouching Toward Nirvana W "The Charles Bukowski archive is an exciting and important addition to The Huntington’s holdings, one that will add new dimension to the Library’s extensive and wide-ranging literary collections. " Curator of Literary Manuscripts Open City and L.A. Free Press His first book of poetry, Flower, Fist, and Bestial Wail , appeared in 1959. In the decade following, his work was discovered by John Martin, proprietor of the Black Sparrow Press, and the Santa Rosa-based publisher issued nearly all of his subsequent 40-plus books. In addition to such volumes of poetry as Burning in Water, Drowning in Flame: Selected Poems, 1955-1973

68. Charles Bukowski (1920-1994) --- Bukowski.wz.cz
charles bukowski. úvodní stránka bukowski.wz.cz život ChB biografie v bodech Filmy inspirované tvorbou ChB Bibliografie ChB
http://bukowski.wz.cz/
bez frejmù to nejde

69. LAist: Apartment Complex Where Charles Bukowski Wrote "Post Office" For Sale, Co
Arguably the finest writer Los Angeles has ever known, charles bukowski typed away volumes of poetry, short stories, and novels in Hollywood.
http://www.laist.com/2007/08/02/apartment_compl.php
more all Austin Boston Chicago ... Washington DC document.getElementById(base + curr).style.display= ""; Home News Food CONTRIBUTE ... FORUM Summary View change this Advertise on LAist About LAist LAist is a website about Los Angeles. More Editor: Zach Behrens Publisher: Gothamist About Archive Contact ... Staff Categories more categories Best Of Breaking Food Miscellaneous News Recent Comments 90039 on CA Teen Arrested for Plans of Plane Hijack marhaban on thecoloured on Ingrid Michaelson: Troubadour Zach Behrens on If You Commute Via Griffith Park... Zach Behrens on Ingrid Michaelson: Thurs. Troubadour Trisha16 on Dani Miura, Actress, To Catch a Predator geekiegirl29 on What is That on Your Ass? tamcall911 on Dani Miura, Actress, To Catch a Predator Favorites Most Recommended: What is That on Your Ass? Heath Ledger found dead in NYC Apartment Neighborhood Project: Country Club Park My Dirty Little Secret: I Love Pinkberry ... John Doe @ Friday Nights at the Getty: 1/18/08 Most Commented: My Dirty Little Secret: I Love Pinkberry Did Hillary Clinton Really Win Nevada?

70. Snowflakes & Blackvampires: Melancholia By Charles Bukowski
What I like most about charles bukowski is that he is just honest and straightforward and doesn´t seem too complicated. I guess this can be applied to his
http://kerstinsklein.blogspot.com/2008/01/melancholia-by-charles-bukowski.html
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Friday, January 11, 2008
Melancholia By Charles Bukowski
Melancholia
Charles Bukowski
the history of melancholia
includes all of us.
me, I writhe in dirty sheets
while staring at blue walls
and nothing.
I have gotten so used to melancholia
that
I greet it like an old
friend. I will now do 15 minutes of grieving for the lost redhead, I tell the gods. I do it and feel quite bad quite sad, then I rise CLEANSED even though nothing is solved. that's what I get for kicking religion in the ass. I should have kicked the redhead in the ass where her brains and her bread and butter are at ... but, no, I've felt sad about everything: the lost redhead was just another smash in a lifelong loss ... I listen to drums on the radio now and grin. there is something wrong with me besides melancholia. Posted by ksklein at 8:57 AM Labels: charles bukowski melancholia poem poet
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71. CHARLES BUKOWSKI
Translate this page Biografia do escritor charles bukowski dissecada pelo jornalista inglês Howard Sounes. Informações para a imprensa, fotos, resenhas e biografia.
http://www.conradeditora.com.br/buk/

72. Black Sparrow Graphic Arts' Charles Bukowski Page
The great French playwright and novelist, Jean Genet, called charles bukowski the best poet in America , high praise indeed from an artist who rarely
http://www.fiamengo.com/bsg/bsg.buk.html
Charles Bukowski
Please click on Bukowski's picture to find out more
about his collaboration
with Ken Price:
The great French playwright and novelist, Jean Genet, called Charles Bukowski "the best poet in America", high praise indeed from an artist who rarely commented on another writer's work and who is considered the undisputed archetypical "underground" writer of the 20th century. Charles Bukowski is certainly America's best-known existential writer and many would claim its most influential and imitated poet. He was born in Andernach, Germany of an American soldier father and a German mother in 1920, and brought to the United States at the age of three. He was raised in Los Angeles and lived there for fifty years. He published his first story in 1944 when he was twenty-four and began writing poetry at the age of thirty-five. He died in San Pedro, California on March 9, 1994 at the age of seventy-three, shortly after completing his last novel, Pulp During his lifetime he published more than forty-five books of poetry and prose including the novels Post Office Factotum Women Ham On Rye (1982) and Hollywood (1989). His most recent books are the posthumous editions of

73. Photographs Selected From The Museum Collection Charles Bukowski
Gottfried Helnwein Helnwein s bukowski and Burroughs photographs in the show San Francisco Museum of Modern Art charles bukowskisilver print.
http://www.helnwein-museum.com/article312.html
Articles Links
PHOTOGRAPHS SELECTED FROM THE MUSEUM COLLECTION
Helnwein's "Bukowski" and "Burroughs" photographs in the show
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
Charles Bukowski
99 cm x 66 cm
silver print
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

74. Charles Bukowski [1920-1994] MiniPage At Maison D'Être Beatnik Coffeehouse
The beloved poet of the underbelly of Los Angeles, and of beauty and defeat in the dregs of the American dream.
http://www.genordell.com/stores/maison/Bukowski.htm
Maison d'Être Beatnik Coffeehouse Charles Bukowski
"Bukowski is the laureate of the Los Angeles underground,
an eccentric who sees the world with a charity of vision
possessed only by artists and madmen."
Los Angeles Times
novels
other works

links

works about Bukowski
P oet Charles 'Hank' Bukowski was born 16 August 1920 in Andernach, Germany. His parents moved to Longwood Avenue in Los Angeles, California, where Hank suffered regular beatings from his father and extreme teenage acne; he attended Los Angeles High School – see his novel "Ham On Rye".
F rom age 18 to 24, he attempted to write for major magazines such as Harper's and Atlantic Monthly , with no success; he stopped writing and then worked odd jobs and drank a lot – see his novel "Factotum". In 1952, the U.S. Post Office hired him to work at Terminal Annex in Downtown Los Angeles; he worked first as a letter carrier and later as a clerk (staying for 18 years) – see his novel "Post Office". After a near-fatal stomach hemorrhage in 1955, he returned to writing with a vengeance. He wrote poetry and was successful in the growing small alternative presses of the time; he wrote a column for the weekly L.A. Free Press

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