ON BUKOWSKI
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I enjoyed Suzanne Lummis’ tribute to Charles Bukowski (April 10). Thank you for publishing it. I attended the March 26 event at Arundel. For another take on what happened that evening, please note the enclosed poem.
The Wake
Buk died and Andernach slept another day and the
wake was held at a bookstore
and maybe 3 poets and 30 typists and 300 secret poets
showed up
only two drunks showed up and one of
them was dead
and they read
oh God how they read
the tall one read
the fat one read
the long-haired
the disheveled
the despondent
the joyous
the terrified
the ex-lover and mother of his child
they all read
and some called him
“bue-kowski”
and some called him
“boo-kowski”
and they kept reading
they kept putting it out over the
radio waves
they kept it up for
hours
and through it all there seemed to be
someone
up into the ceiling
somewhere,
like a raging vapor
there was much shouting and cursing
(I heard this)
“go home!”
. . .
there was only one way to
truly honor the man so
I left early and got
on the wrong freeway
heading home
too much
too many
too many vice cops
too many hairdressers
too many ex-bullfighters named Hector
too many rock stars
too many porn queens
too many whale watchers
too many pizza cooks
too many country western dance instructors
too many business travelers, staring at neon
too many guidance counselors
too many sexpots
too many poets
too many
way, way too many
too many cement mixers
too many fixer-uppers
too much taco meat
too many rusty medicine chests
too many therapeutic massages
too much gusto
too much pesto
too many riptides
too many old women wondering what their sons and daughters
are doing this minute
too much bird of paradise
too many angels in the city tonight
too many retired surfers
too many
too much
DAVE BOYLES, RIVERSIDE
I thought Lummis’ tribute was right on the mark. So we’ve lost Bukowski and gained the information superhighway. What is wrong with this picture?
JOHN GRULA, LOS ANGELES
The eulogy of Bukowski caused this old observer to remember Betty Rowland.
Betty Rowland (the “Original Ball of Fire”) was a striptease artist. Like Charles Bukowski, she pursued a long career in this city. Rowland’s career, like Bukowski’s, was an extended exercise of self-exposure. Like Bukowski, Rowland learned that self-exposure, if practiced diligently, could develop an enthusiastic, if not exceptionally literate, audience. While the two careers had a number of parallels, there was one genuinely significant difference: What Betty Rowland exposed was well-made and worthy of scrutiny.
JAMES B. KENNEDY, REDONDO BEACH
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