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There are 16 comments on Hanging with Bukowski at the Gotlieb Center

  1. Caleb, thanks for so compellingly singing the value of pen on paper. After the apocalypse, when all the electronic devices has been fried and all our electronic files are gone, it will be our history on paper, stored in the vaults, that lets us rebuild and tells those who come after us who we were.

  2. This was a very good article, Mr. Daniloff. I like how you combined some of Charles Bukowski’s biographical tid bits with your experience at the Research Center. It all tied together really well. Admittedly, I haven’t read any of Mr. Bukowski’s books, although I have seen the movie “Factotum” with Matt Dillon playing his alter ego. After reading this article, I will definitely pick up one of Mr. Bukowski’s books.

  3. Hi Caleb,

    I wanted to thank you for your article “Hanging with Bukowski at the Gotlieb Center” and for visiting the archives. The HGARC truly appreciates you sharing your candid thoughts on your trip there and your coverage of the center. I will keep you updated on any benchmarks they make towards digitizing the archives over the next year.

    Thanks again!

    Lauren

    Lauren E. Domingos
    Media Relations
    Boston University

  4. Caleb,
    My name is Chelsea Bednarski, and I am a junior english education major at BU…and I really wanted to tell you how much i loved your article. Buk has been one of my favorite authors since my 10th grade english teacher gave me Post Office (off the record of course, due to content, and only with permission from my mom, who also digs on bukowski), and he was also the teacher who singlehandedly inspired my direction in life. So anyway. Go Bukowski, go you. :) Thanks for the amazing read.
    And here’s some advice from our man that I have found profoundly helpful…

    "What is your advice to young writers?"
    "Drink, fuck, and smoke plenty of cigarettes."
    "What is your advice for older writers?"
    "If you’re still alive, you don’t need any advice."

    -("The Great Poet",Hot Water Music)
    -Chelsea Bednarski

  5. Dear Mr. Daniloff,
    On the internet I read your enthusiastic article about hanging out with Bukowski at the Gotlieb Center. Very nice to read! Because of what I read and also the text of the bluebird I thought you might also be interested in the Bach-Bukowski project (concerts and CDs) by Willem van Ekeren (Holland). Bach-Bukowski is an extraordinary mixture of singing and piano. He actually made a Bach-Bukowski song of the poem the bluebird as well. 22 of the poems of Bukowski’s ˜The last night of the earth poems’ are woven together with 22 parts of the ˜Well-tempered Clavier’ of Bach.
    The lyrics are sung blues/jazz style in combination with authentic Bach music on the piano.

    On YouTube you can find some videomaterial of live concerts under:
    http://nl.youtube.com/user/bachbukowski (including the bluebird)
    Of course you can find this and much more info also on our website as well as more audio and video fragments. It is also possible to order the cd.
    http://www.bach-bukowski.nl/en/

    Thought you might want to know!

    Best regards,

    Marguerite van de Poll

    Pearl Productions

    spark@bach-bukowski.nl

    http://www.bach-bukowski.nl

  6. Caleb,
    I really enjoyed your article on Bukowski. I have no personal experience with his writing, but if I can fit him in to my own crazy life, I plan to. Your article is inspiring and well written.
    Thanks!

  7. An outstanding piece of writing. All dimensions. Great description of your experience, insights. Motivating as well. I just put a number of Bukowski-related items in my library queue. I’m working on another volume of
    poems at the moment and am more in the mood for video. Going to start with a documentary on the man.

  8. As someone who spends a great deal of time working with archival material, I could certainly relate to your sense of anticipation in the motions that you go through before being granted access. Though, I often find the experience of anticipation outweighs the actual experience of viewing the objects themselves – on a purely emotional level that is.

    Bukowski gets a good deal of bad press as a writer. People are quick to dismiss him as something you grow out of in your teens. I’ve never felt that way, and I’ve never understood the impetus behind the will to compartmentalise poets, writers and playwrights.

    If the words speak to you here and now, then that is enough.

  9. I worked in the library at the time and I was involved in small press publishing. I wrote a letter to Bukowski (his poems often appeared in literary magazines I published) asking him if I could publish the letters as a book. He wrote back telling me that John Martin had the rights to his work and told me to write to John. John wrote back (no email in those days) letting me know they were going to be published by his press. Archives received a letter shortly after that asking for a copy of the letters.

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