rhyming poem:
the lucky ones
what can we do? Stories
Confession of a Coward
Break-In
First published story
Aftermath of a Lengthy Rejection Slip
Others on Bukowski
Bukowski - by Linda King - 1973, Small Press Review
Rolling Stone magazine - 1976
Los Angeles Times - 1996 (Bukowski manuscripts rescued from a garbage can)
Long Beach Press-Telegram - 2000, interview with Linda and Marina
Poems and stories ©Linda Lee Bukowski - used with permission.
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- Charles Bukowski: San Pedro plans to honor star writer after tourist demand | US news | The Guardian
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A s the unofficial historian of San Pedro, the rough but charming working-class port of the city of Los Angeles, Angela Romero fields one question more than any other: where is the monument to Charles Bukowski? German tour companies want to know. So do large numbers of casual visitors who routinely make the 25-mile trek from downtown LA to learn more about the cult writer, boozehound, and confessional poet of the damned who made San Pedro his final home. And the answer, up to now, has always been the same: sorry, we don't have one. Lack of affection for Bukowski is not the problem, even if the mainstream literary world tends to look down on him as a cheap-trick populist, and his frank writing about bedding women – and standing in awe of " so much breast and ass " – doesn't exactly jibe with our #MeToo cultural moment. A stencil of poet Charles Bukowski, by Elvis Segarich, adorns a window in San Pedro. Photograph: Andrew Gumbel/The Guardian
Rather, San Pedro has been slow to realize just how passionate an international following Bukowski still commands a quarter-century after his death at the age of 73.