Here is a book I finished reading sometime in 1998 or 1999 as a University student. Exact date and time wasn't recorded. (I didn't always write that in the cover back then)
I own 13 Bukowski books and will review them all in this blog at some point. For his collected poems the reviews will be quite short - his novels will get a proper review. Stay tuned for more if they are not posted yet. If you're a fan please leave comments.
The idea to read this book came from my girlfriend at the time (Kelly) who after dating me for awhile figured that Bukowski was my kind of guy. Now that I have read well over a dozen of his novels and collected poems, I am unsure how I feel about that. For those of you who know Bukowski like I do, I am sure you can understand why.
Without giving too much away the book is complied of around 120 poems. As with all Bukowski's collect poetry that I will review in this blog, there isn't much I can say that you won't find out on your own. Poetry is particularly hard for me to review, so I will say little except to recommend that you read them. I will also list 10 of my favorites for the sake of sharing, although there were so many more than that in this book specifically.
Here are a few I really enjoyed: 1. a free 25 page booklet. 2. the garbage man. 3. rain. 4. drunk ol' bukowski drunk. 5. slim killers 6. story and poem. 7. the inquisitor. 8. the mockingbird. 9. the rat. 10. hot.
Bukowski has so many moments of brutal honesty, for example in 'drunk ol' bukowski drunk' and 'the inquisitor' the reader can easily see him as he existed in real life as these things unfold. From what I have learned about Charles Bukowski, his poems are like tiny glances into his actual life. Take 'the rat' for example, or 'hot' I don't think there was ever any pretending with Bukowski.
I recommend this book for all those of you who know what I am talking about when I say that you have to enjoy the 'Bukowski-style' in order to dig it. Trust me when I say you would also enjoy Canadian Author; Juan Butler (who I consider to be the Canadian equivalent - also reviewed in this blog.)
This book is 159 pages long and I remember finishing it really quickly, I was an instant fan.
On my sliding scale I give this book a solid 9/10 - It's a great introduction to Bukowski if you were to treat it as such. I am very lucky to have obtained a copy back when Black Sparrow Press was still around (Google it) The Black Sparrow publications always had the greatest paper textures for their covers, and this book is no exception. If you like to collect and own hard copies of what you read (as I do) this simple pleasure can be very appealing.
The main Character ( Raoul Duke - based on Dr. Thompson) is accompanied by his Samoan 'attorney'(Dr.Gonzo - based on real life activist; Oscar Zeta Acosta), whose sole advice is to rent a red convertible and fill the trunk with booze and drugs for their consumption. The sporting assignment is sadly never covered due to large clouds of dust the racers stir up from the desert sand. Raoul returns to his hotel where he and Dr.Gonzo destroy a hotel room and rack up an insanely large hotel room-service bill.
They consume more than enough drugs and hit the streets of Las Vegas in a drug induced frenzy, eventually concluding their time together after Dr. Gonzo's disturbing display of violence.
At some point in the story Raoul tries to flee Vegas, but he is forced to return after an unfortunate experience with the highway patrol. It seems as if he keeps getting sucked back in.
Later in the book, Dr. Gonzo finds Raoul another assignment; covering a DA convention on illegal drugs, a convention filled with lawmen from around America; not the place for a drug crazed lunatic-journalist. Gonzo and Raoul are reunited shortly after; again they embark on their usual bouts of over the top drug consumption and destroy yet another hotel room. The pair eventually split again and Raoul returns to LA, escaping the large bills for damages he and Gonzo have accrued at their various hotel visits.
I recommend this book to all fans of 1960's hippy culture. Dr. Thompson's famous "wave speech" included in this book almost entirely condenses the totality of the 'hippy movement' with just a few paragraphs. That in particular is one of the reasons I love Hunter S. Thompson's writing; he has an incredible ability to paint for his readers an exact portrait of even something like a generation - even when the reader (like myself) was not there to experience it first hand. For anyone who has no desire to read this book, I still strongly recommend reading that short piece if literary genius; the 'wave speech' that is. (Google it)