The bulk of the collection consists of magazines and anthologies
that contain Bukowski's contributions; also includes books translated into
other languages. Correspondence varies from that of friends and fans, to
business correspondence with presses and magazines.
Collection Number:
MS 171
Repository:
University of Arizona Libraries, Special Collections
University of Arizona
PO Box 210055
Tucson, AZ 85721-0055
Phone: 520-621-6423
Fax: 520-621-9733
URL: http://speccoll.library.arizona.edu/
Biographical Note
Charles Bukowski (1920-1994) was born in Andernach, Germany and came to
the U.S. when he was three. He grew up in Los Angeles and began writing as a
child. He published his first story at age 24 and first poem at age 35. He
spent much of his life drifting. Although Bukowski did not associate with "beat
writers," his style attracts readers and followers of the beat generation. A
prolific writer, much of his work is based on his own experience using the
language and subjects of the street. He wrote long-hand, much of it sent to
publishers and never seen again. Bukowski became widely known after the movie
"Barfly" which was based on his life around the time
Factotum was written and featured Mickey Rourke. Bukowski
wrote the screenplay and was involved with the movie production. Prior to
"Barfly", he was best known by the public for his novel
Post Office. In literary circles, Bukowski was praised for
his poetry. Yet, he had a strong disregard for formal structure and did not
consider himself a poet. He died in his adopted hometown of San Pedro,
California.
Scope and Content Note
The bulk of the collection consists of magazines and anthologies that
contain Bukowski's contributions; also includes books translated into other
languages. Correspondence varies from that of friends and fans, to business
correspondence with presses and magazines. Most of the manuscripts are
typescript; some have edits, and some are signed and dated. These manuscripts
of poems and prose often contain edge of society themes. Original appearances
of
Notes of a Dirty Old Man date from 1967-
1976. Ephemera consists of posters, announcements of readings, undated
photographs of Bukowski, and two acrylic drawings signed by him.
Some items in German, French, Italian, Spanish and Dutch.
It is the responsibility of the user to obtain permission to publish
from the owner of the copyright (the institution, the creator of the record,
the author or his/her transferees, heirs, legates, or literary executors). The
user agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Arizona Board of Regents for the
University of Arizona, its officers, employees, and agents from and against all
claims made by any person asserting that he or she is an owner of
copyright.
Other materials by and about Bukowski are located in the Papers of
Charles Bukoswki (MS 148) and Loujon Press Collection Relating to Charles
Bukowski (MS 291).
"IN MEMORY OF THE SECOND LEADING JOCKEY AT SANTA
ANITA"
"46 and 9/10's"(extracted from notes)
"sailing up your yellow river" (two versions)
"but the stockmarket went up today"
"funny man"
"the girls in pantyhose at bus stop benches"
"the famous man"
"the machine"
"the sex goddess"
"rip tide"
"BLUEBIRD"
"an answer to a week's worth of mail"
"the lady's man"
"profit-taking"
"I've seen the many glazed-eyed bums sitting under a bridge
drinking cheap wine"
"I was born in Andernach, Germany August 16, 1920"
""we all have hand guns and switchblades around
here"
"It's all a matter of the gate---"
"now if you were teaching creative writing, he asked, what
would you tell them"
"the good life"
"An Art"
"the hungry madness of a miracle"
"the Word"
"ALL THOSE SOUNDS OF SEX AND LOVE AND LONLINESS WHILE WE
POSE AS ARTISTS"
"A NOTE UPON A WORKSHOP INSTRUCTOR WITH TINY HAIRS UNDER
HIS CHIN"
"DRUNK UPON THE CONTINENT OF THE DREAM"
"all the spies to numb your ass and your brain and your
heart"
"Chopin Bukowski"
"the thing"
"5/1/75"
"about crabs and things"
"doom and siesta time"
"the great film director"
"my lucky friend"
8
6
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1975
Includes:
"the meek have inherited"
"who in the hell is Tom Jones?"
"the red pigeon"
"those flashes..."
"bright spots of light or serpents"
"AT&T"
""an ounce of prevention is worth it"
"I watch those thin-hoofed beasts"
"sitting in a sandwich joint just off the freeway" (two
versions).
"some people ask for it"
"and a horse with greenblue eyes walks on the sun"
"the claws of Paradise"
"one for the Jag"
"the good loser"
"to the soul-seekers"
"guru"
"airplane spin"
"the fathead"
"a lovely couple" (photocopy; on reverse side is an undated
letter from Dave Herman with explanation).
"I'd like a mermaid"
"visitor"
"about this thing we bother with"
"JONES"
" milk a cow and get milk"
""the meaning"
"Ezra's dead; don't splash me with your horseshit"
"the gloomy lady"
"space is everywhere"
""trench warfare"
"the insane always loved me"
"the fisherman"
"full moon"
"in al fairness"
"the girls at the green hotel" (earlier version)
"one for Rochelle Owens"
"on the big perfume contract"
"clean old man"
"piranhas"
"yet it's still a long way to St. Louis" (two versions)
"ask the butterfly"
"the big score"
"out on the branch"
"the girls at the green hotel" (later version)
"problems in American and Los Angeles"
"all God's rats"
"will the real thing please stand up and wave a wooden
arm?"
"an unusual place"
"arena"
"fast fuck"
"garter belt"
"the worst and the best"
8
7
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1975
Includes:
"the genius"
"half a goldfish"
"rain or shine"
"my father and the bum"
"luck from a dirty kitchen"
"overcast"
"the anarchists"
"the joke"
"thoughts from a stone bench in Venice"
"Nava, and life"
"chauv poems"
"cockroach"
"mean and stingy"
"note upon the end of an affair"
"no fuck"
"the imagination and the reality"
"all the little girls"
"the price"
"little tigers everywhere"
"a definition"
"further stanzas of 'a definition'"
"junkies"
"Texsun"
"I never knew anybody"
"near a plateglass window"
"stolen"
"2 horsecollars"
"Nellie Fox, MVP"
"the place didn't look that bad"
"murder"
"Chicago"
"an acceptance slip"
"figs"
"the hallelujah chorus"
"the silver mirror (for Georgia K.)" (two versions)
"let's write" (extracted from notes)
"warm water bubbles" (extracted from notes, two
versions)
8
8
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1976
Includes:
"on photographs"
"how come you're not unlisted?"
"January 1976"
"white like snow"
"traffic signals"
"dead now"
"communion"
"a corny poem"
"darling"
"ah, shit"
"twins"
"the march"
""the girl on the bus stop bench"
"life off of Hollywood and Western"
"coupons"
"fear"
"prayer for a whore in bad weather"
"a touch of steel"
"she came out of the bathroon with her flaming red hair and
said---"
"the death kiss"
"shit, sometimes it gets so lonely I can't even commit
suicide"
"coke blues"
"this then"
"trap"
"her Porshe is a pale pink"
"sex"
"the promise"
"the 6 foot goddess (for S.D.)"
...last page ( stanza) of a poem
"beer"
"Longshot"
"beds, toilets, you and me"
"liberty"
"the fortune teller" (first of four versions of this
poem)
"the poem of the empty bed"
8
9
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1976
Includes:
"Me and Irwin Shaw"
"waving and waving goodbye"
"the fortune teller" (three versions of this poem)
"BE ALONE"
"defeat becomes habitual"
"the beautiful young girl walking past the
graveyard--"
"How to be a great writer"
"a stethoscope case"
"DON'T TOUCH THE GIRLS"
"QUIET CLEAN GIRLS IN GINGHAM DRESSES..."
"against the tide"
"the death trend"
"light brown"
"there was once a woman who put her head into an oven that
I could have kissed with the most ultimate love possible"
"the bee"
"a floor job"
"bedpans"
"huge ear rings"
"love"
"weep"
"war, and that particular bayonet"
"for Al"
"T.M."
"through and through"
"the retreat"
"balls"
"my friend Harry"
"carrot"
"another bed"
"ashes"
"bathtub"
"she wrote me"
"Carlton Way off Western"
"225 pounds"
"I'm as crazy as I ever was"
"V.G."
"goodbye, goodbye, clipped-winged bluebird"
"103 degrees"
"hunchback"
"melancholia and the redhead"
"a goodbye (for L.K.)"
"madness"
"bath #4"
"Hang it up, Bukowski"
"an unkind poem, they will say--"
8
10
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1977
Includes:
"note for my wall"
"2 men at the track"
"I need and I demand"
"tangerines"
"the woman from Germany"
"rise, old purple snake"
"Nana"
"come back, you know who's best"
""rock"
"here's for your nostalgia about the 50's and 60's"
"operator"
"the lady with the dog"
"NOTE LEFT ON THE DRESSER BY A LADY FRIEND"
"best bet"
"William Burrows"
"Horse and Fist"
"Drain-o"
"professional counseling"
"men and urinals"
"inflation and all"
"Firing Squad"
"lost dog"
"post parade"
"about a trip to Spain"
"uggh..."
"how ya gonna keep 'em down on the farm?"
"the killer smiles"
8
11
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1977
Includes:
"59 cents a pound"
"a matter of size"
"8 rooms"
"no place to hide"
"mermaid"
"a good show"
"an observer"
"a note upon waste"
"these same walls"
"respite"
"The Beach Boys"
"a note upon starvation"
"the pretty girl who rented rooms"
"I do it while thinking about things"
"upon phoning an x-wife who I haven't seen for twenty
years"
"downtown"
"she's free and wild"
"the ladies who rip men apart"
""the old quarterback"
"a most serious fellow"
"Sam the mailman"
"66 Volks mini-bus"
"the firing of the canons"
"notes upon an almost meaningless night"
"a boy and his dog"
"passport"
8
12
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1977
Includes:
"training instructions"
"love"
"smashed"
"an old jockey"
"4 years hard time on Carlton Way"
"yes"
"some notes on the word and the way"
"it's not strange"
"we're all so wanted"
"silk"
"tongue-cut"
"o, the literary life"
"Purse $8,000. For three-year olds and upward. Three-year
olds, 118 pounds; older, 120 lbs.. Non-winners at one mile or over since
October 6 allowed 3 lbs; since July 25, 6 lbs. Claiming price $6,250. (Races
when entered for $4,000 or less not considered.)"
"the man on the bus stop bench"
"Edith sent us"
"exegesis"
"11:45 p.m. discussion"
"promenade"
"the image"
"and my mother had a nice umbrella and looked beautiful and
funny in the rain..."
"plate glass window"
"the finish of Moby Dick"
"the whores, the people at the taco stands, the bus
drivers, the cops, the killers, the janitors, the highschool teachers, the
priests, and the garbagemen"
"there's one in every bar"
"ow"
"some thanks for some luck, temporary or otherwise" and
untitlted poem
"Venice, Calif., Nov. 1977"
"snow goose"
8
13
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1977
Includes:
"my 2nd. and 3rd. jobs"
"the interview"
"the last night at the harness races"
"guru"
"with a crass lady in a big flower hat"
"2 buddies"
"2nd. street, near Hollister, in Santa Monica"
"I drove her to the food stamp place and I had a hamburger
while I waited and after a while we walked around and then"
"the lady poet of unrelenting doom"
"a large room and a small room"
"a fact"
"overt population"
"he uses unwaxed dental floss"
"double encounter of another kind"
"high-roller"
"panasonic"
the deathly bravo"
"letter"
"the beast"
"grandma"
"platonic"
"job #36"
"legs"
8
14
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1978
Includes:
"a drink to that"
"Hooked on H"
"winter meeting"
"time is made to be wasted"
"suicide"
"have a nice day"
"Sibelius and etc."
"the big weight-lifting feat"
"Hollywood Ranch Market"
"hot coffee"
"a bad night for my buddy"
"the indian"
"Combat Primer"
"it's not all wasted"
"conversation"
"coming"
"info"
"the way"
"hot dog"
"Christ in the Manger"
"anonymity"
"craft"
box
folder
9
1
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1978
Includes:
"time off"
"water bugs"
"Hollywood" (an earlier version of "the dandy")
"jilted"
"my buddy"
"the embracers"
"the dandy"
"the lodgers"
"a member of the jury" (earlier version)
"a member of the jury (later version)
"so I got of the the AE-I"
"Good Friday"
"5000 dollars"
"Europe"
"those"
"death of the toteboards, Hollywood Park, April 21,
1978"
"legs, hips and behind"
"the end of a short love affair"
"the playboy of the Western world leaves the field to those
who desire it--"
"where's it at?"
"the yards"
"chilled"
"Igloo"
"crazy"
9
2
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1978
Includes:
"the weather's been fair"
"racetrack"
"travertine"
"you can't make a lion out of a butterfly"
"I.U.(C.)D:
"Funny Man"
"it's easy"
"black"
"all together now"
"kuv stuff mox out"
"the terrorists"
"the girls are gone"
"Rhine cruise"
"Academy Award"
"mosquito"
"victory"
"the whores of Hamburg"
"4 Christs"
"side show"
"a great place"
"mouth"
"legs"
"N.Y. Times"
"there are hecklers in Germany too"
"telephone"
"the American writer"
"bad fix"
9
3
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1978
Includes:
"head jobs"
"tank jobs"
"farewell"
"the pros"
"talk"
"Pretty Boy"
"fat head poem"
"Sad letters from up North"
"train station"
"the trashing of the dildo"
"gift"
"a long hot day at the track"
"EVEN CHATTERTON DRANK RAT POISON AND LEFT US AT
PEACE"
"a big Thursday night at Hollywood and Western"
"the golden god"
"Frankfurt guns"
"EUROPE, AMERICA AND MY LIVER"
"Mannheim, Germany, May 1978"
"have a nice day"
"water the plants"
"he used to be"
"one-ball Willie"
9
4
Poetry Manuscripts.
, 1970-1974
Includes:
"THE AVOIDANCE OF BOREDOM"
"Brands"
"the Chinaman did right"
"ALL THE SACRED CHRISTS THAT NEVER ARRIVE"
"ART CLASS"
"belly"
"Charles"
"the creation of the morning line"
"death"
"The 4th of July Holiday"
"the giraffes"
"the glass fly"
"a great man speaks of great men"
"I didn't what time it was until I met you"
"the icecream people"
"ONE WITH DANTE"
"THE ONE WHO COULDN'T MISS"
"Poem for an Errand Boy in the Year 1941"
"poem for Dante"
"Song for this Softly-Sweeping Sorrow" (two
versions)
"tv"
"an unhappy lady"
'"UPON AN INVITATION TO A PARTY IN WEST L.A., WHICH I
DIDN'T GO TO"
"Venice, Calif."
"wet night"
"wrong crapper"
"yes,yes"
"crisscross under sideways"
"dig me a ditch"
"I HAVE TAKEN THE PLACE OF THE STARVING ARTIST I USED TO BE
(for Charles Bukowski)"
"now she hates me" (two versions)
"Africa, Paris, Greece"
"the Apprentices"
"the big ride"
"the crunch"
"F.F. (for Graham and Claire)"
"guru"
"how good sleep is before having to walk down any street
--"
""I cause some remarkable creativity"
"interviews"
"liberty"
"My ol' drinking buddies..."
"my toilet"
"$180 out"
"private first class"
"women at my dresser mirror"
"yellow cab"
9
5
Poetry Manuscripts.
, No
Date
Includes:
"Action down on the Corner"
"All God's Children"
"and it's shady too"
"AND MOZART LIVED ON BIRD STREET"
"another poem for another lady"
"as the angels shine their bungholes"
"the best love poem I can write at the moment"
"a bit of early morning action"
"bloodred"
"BLUE MOON, OH BLEWEEWW MOOOOON HOW I ADORE YOU"
"Bob Dylan"
"Born to Lose"
"broken ass like a cherry seed down the throat"
"clown poem: I"
"constitutional rights"
"crowds"
"DEATH"
"down at Prarie and Century this is where we live"
"dragging around the heights with typewriter
fingers"
"18th and Grand"
"an exaggeration"
"50 watercolors"
"$5.95"
"flie song"
"FRANKLY D. WAS AN OLD CRIPPLE JUST LIKE LIFE"
"the Gigolo"
"the giraffes"
"go to your grave cleanly--"
"a groupie"
"A HAPPY MAN"
"haul ass, wonder woman"
"hug the dark"
"I can hear the sound of human lives being ripped to
pieces"
""I got my diploma"
"I LOSE SOME MORE TOY BALLOONS"
"I PISS UPON THE WORKS OF MEN"
"I sometimes have shit stains in my underwear"
"junk"
"the knife waltz"
"LAUNDRY"
"a lazy afternoon"
"a lifetime report from an agent from Mars who lived almost
his total life on earth"
"little magazines and poetry chapbooks"
"livin' in a great big way"
"love"
"Love is a midget"
9
6
Poetry Manuscripts.
, No
Date
Includes:
"the mad poet"
"MAN AND WOMAN IN BED AT 10:30 P.M."
"mean black kitty"
"mons of honey drown the lark hahaha"
"my hump-backed laughing soul"
"my instructor"
"no man is an island"
"o.d."
"on shooting"
"one for old Marv between the popcorn and the
beer--"
"ONE FOR THE SHOESHINE MAN"
"one night stands"
"THE ONE WHO COULDN'T MISS"
"the only mistress"
"THE ORIGINAL"
"THE PAINTER"
"THE POETRY READING"
"Polish Sausage"
"the reason:"
"REXALL CUT-RATE, 4:30 P.M."
"Robinson Jeffers and love"
"The Scale"
"sometimes even putting a nickle into a parking meter feels
fairly good--"
""Song of this old man"
"star-fuckers"
"stillness"
"tables"
"THIS ONE POET"
"thoughts on an evening when grey walls breathe and
huff:"
"3 pairs of panties"
"the triangle"
"unleaded"
"Upon Going to bed with a copy of Cosmopolitan"
"A VISITOR FROM CANADA"
"The Way It Works"
"we are all the residue of a democratic society"
"what they want"
"what we did"
"with grace and all the luck of the way"
"you, back in the ninth row, let me tell you
something"
Incomplete Poems: Last Pages of Three Poems
9
7
Prose Manuscripts:
Notes of a Dirty Old Man.
, 1970-1975
With the exception of poetry, individual pieces in
Notes are untitled. The first
sentence, or part thereof, is used for indentification. Includes:
"It was in Washinton, D.C., a private party..."
"Down around Sunset, about Sunset and Wilton..."
"Gary picked up the phone."
"Harry bought a newspaper and walked into the travel
agency..."
"He came into town one night dressed all in black..."
9
8
Prose Manuscripts:
Notes of a Dirty Old Man.
, 1971-1976
With the exception of poetry, individual pieces in
Notes are untitled. The first
sentence, or part thereof, is used for indentification. Includes:
"I awakened at 8:30 a.m."
"I met the Crotties quite by accident."
"I suppose one of the most amazing and startling
acts..."
"Marty drove up the lane, parked the car and got out."
"They were both seven years old..."
Poetry: "Eddie Belmonte," "little theatre Hollywood," "the
concrete world," "IN THE CENTER OF THEIR VERY ACTION," "no more of these
men..." (this poem is incomplete and there may originally have been other
titles).
"Outside of La Paz, about an hour and a half..."
"Pete was 13, a difficult age they say..." (first eight
pages)
"The ambulance was full but they found me a place on top..."
(first and second pages)
9
9
Other Prose Manuscripts.
, 1971-1977
Includes:
Untitled, incomplete (first page only) essay on d.a. levy,
1971
"The Outsider", tribute to Jon Web (incomplete, pp. 5-9,
published in
The Wormwood Review #45,
1972)
"The L.A. Scene...", 1971-1972
"A note on these Poems", on Al Prudy, November 24,
1976
Abyss, v.3, #1, Spring: "POET IN
RESIDENCE," "NOBODY WANTS TO HEAR YOUR TROUBLES," and "the misfit."
, 1971
10
2
Adam, v.15, #5, October, p. 11:
"Dirty Old Man Confesses."
,
1971
10
3
Adam, v.16, #1, February, p. 13:
"Animal Crackers in My Soup."
,
1972
10
4
Adios Againe, #7, p. 14: "Buk at
Bodega," by Pierette Jordan.
, 1975
10
5
Aldebaran Review, #9, August:
At Terror Street and Agony Way,
review, author unknown.
,
1970
10
6
The American Poetry Review, v.4, #2,
p. 11: "B," and "Drooling Madness at St. Liz."
, 1975
10
7
Ampersand, March: "Confessions of a
Misanthrope."
, 1969
10
8
Amphora, #8, pp. 20-24:
"Louis-Ferdinand Destouches," "Death," "Winterlost," "pain is a flower..."
(first line), "All the Sacred Christs that Never Arrive."
, 1972
10
9
Aunt Harriet's, November, pp. 2-5:
"love," " a plausible finish," "pull a string, a puppet moves...," "An Almost
Made up Poem about a Lady Who Has Vanished from My Mailbox."
,
1974
10
10
the avalanche, #2, Fall: "Guilt
Obsession behind a Cloud of Rockets."
, 1967
10
11
the avalanche, #3, Summer: "living."
, 1967
10
12
Bachy, v.1, #3, July, pp. 109-111:
"Purple and Black," "My Brother Ernest Hemingway," and "Measurements from the
Creation Coffin."
,
1972
Bartleby's Review, v.1, #1, pp.
14-15: "ah."
, 1972
10
15
Bastard Angel, #3, Fall, pp. 46-47:
"the blue head of death," and "blue cheese and chili peppers."
,
1974
10
16
Bear, #1: "the flu," and "The
Answer."
, 1971
10
17
Blitz, #1: "86'd," "On Going Out to Get the Mail," and
"Spain Sits Like a Hidden Flower in My Coffeepot."
, 1965?
10
18
Brand "X", #5, May: "My Faithful
Indian Servant."
,
1962
10
19
CQ (California State Poetry Society,
Quarterly), v.1, #2, Winter, pp. 2-4, 46: "the ordinary care of the world," "he
learned it from Gertie," and "The Movie."
, 1972
10
20
California Librarian, v.31, #4,
October, p. 246: "the poetry reading."
,
1970
10
21
Camels Coming, #1, May: two letters
from C.B. to Richard Morris (editor).
,
1972
10
22
Cave #4, November, pp. 4, 8-10,
12-13: "The Hippies and the Killer," "down by the sea, the beautiful sea," "A
Hot Tip on the Future," "Ya Know Beethoven Conducted His Last Symphony While
Almost Totally Deaf?," "down the silver river with one shoe off," "Notes on a
Dirty Old Man (An Introduction to Charles Bukowski)," by G.J. Melling.
,
1973
10
23
Chicago Review, v.24, #3, Winter,
pp. 128-129, and 131: "notes upon reading the
Christian Science Monitor," The
glass fly," "there are demons in all our heavens," and "zoo."
,
1972
10
24
Choice, #2, p. 48: "9 rings."
, 1962
10
25
Choice, #5, p. 32: "People as
Flowers," and "To Hell with Robert Schumann."
, 1967
10
26
Chouteau Review, v.2, #1,Summer, p.
61: "ask the butterfly," and "bathtub."
,
1977
box
folder
11
1
City Lights Journal, #4, p. 43: "A
Scene of Temperate Indifference."
, 1978
11
2
Coast, v.17, #2, February: "I'd Like
a Mermaid."
, 1976
11
3
Coastlines, #20 (v.5, #4), p. 12:
"Warble In--."
, 1963
11
4
Congress, #1, p. 25: "The Way the
Dead Love (from a "novel in progress") ."
, 1967
11
5
Copkiller, #1, January: "The Status
Q. for Me and Yew."
, 1968
11
6
Corduroy, v.1, #3, p. 8: "beefrice."
, 1972
11
7
Cotyledon, #2(?), pp. 8-9: "those
sons of bitches," "a little bit of EXCITEMENT," "A Hero's Death" "Robert Ryan:
American Matador," "the virgin of the bulls," "song," and "An Interesting
Night."
, No
Date
11
8
Crazy Horse, #12, Autumn: "You Don't
Know What Love Is (an evening with Charles Bukowski)", by Raymond Carver.
, 1972
11
9
Creem, v.7, #5, October:
"Jaggernaut" and "Wild Horse on a Plastic Phallus."
, 1975
11
10
Dare, v.4, #8, November, p. 45: "the
moment of truth" with a short commentary by Hale Chatfield.
,
11
11
De Humanities, v.1, #3, Summer: "an
unusual place," "arena," "those sons of bitches," quote from inside front
cover.
, 1966
11
12
Desperado, #9, November: " For C.B." by Linda King.
, 1974
11
13
Dodeca, #16 (v.2, #8), August:
"Bukowski in New York: One Six-pack Isn't Enough" by Tom Jackrell.
, 1976
11
14
Down Here, v.1, #1, p. 8: "The
Bukowski-McNamara Letters" correspondence between C.B. and Tom McNamara.
, 1966
11
15
Down Here, v.1, #2, Spring, p. 87:
"McNamara Letter" letter from C.B. to Tom McNamara and two letters from T.M. to
C.B.
, 1967
11
16
dust, v.1, #4, Fall, pp. 75-76: "ice
for the eagles."
, 1964
11
17
dust, v.1, #4, Winter, p. 26: "Uraguay or Hell."
, 1965
11
18
dust, v.2, #4, (#8), Spring/Summer:
"A Fine Day and the World Looks Good."
, 1966
11
19
Earth, #1: "freedom," and
Confessions of a Man Insane Enough to Live
with Beasts, review, author unknown.
, 1965
11
20
Earth, #2: "upon/that which makes
the..." (first lines), "I Love You," "3 lovers," "I am read to," "the people"
and
The Earth Rose.
, 1966
11
21
The Eight Pager, series 1, part 3:
"The Stupid Are Best at the Cruelties" and "The Sex-obsessed Ladies Walking by
Me after Work."
, No
Date
11
22
The Emerson Review, v.1, #1, Winter,
pp. 8-9, 11: "Experience," "Weather Report," and "Part of an Ordinary Day of an
Inordinate Man."
, 1963
11
23
Entrails, #4, July-August, p. 48:
"the faces are gnawing at my wall but have not yet come in...."
, 1967
11
24
Entrails Anthology (The Human Voice,
v. 3, #4, Winter), pp. 16-17: "God," "tomorrow there will be a letter in the
mail" (first line).
, 1967-1968
11
25
Event, v.1, #3, Winter, pp. 40, 42,
44: "I Saw an Old Fashioned Whore Today," "The Sun Is the God of the Attic,"
and "the original."
, 1972
11
26
Event, v.2, #1, pp. 40, 42: "Notes
upon the Flaxen Aspect," and "Use of the Continuous Present."
, 1972(?)
11
27
Event, v.2, #2, Fall, pp. 50-51:
"Hot," and a painting of C.B. by Dini Evanier.
, 1972
11
28
Event, v.2, #3, Spring: "A Letter
from Charles Bukowski" addressed to David Evanier (editor).
, 1973
11
29
Event, v.3, #3, Summer, pp. 14, 16,
18, 20-21: "All God's Children Got Troubles," "I Can't Stay in the Same Room
with that Woman for Five Minutes," "I get all the latest hit tunes/free" (first
lines), "You Do It While You're Killing Flies," "Dragging around the Heights
with Typewriter Fingers," and "The Artist."
, 1973
Evergreen Review, v.13, #63,
February, p. 44: "Even the Sun Was Afraid."
, 1969
11
32
Evergreen Review, v.13, #70, September, p. 41: "The
Birth, Life, and Death of an Underground Newspaper."
, 1969
11
33
Evergreen Review, v.14, #74,
January, p. 55: "The Day We Talked about James Thurber."
, 1970
11
34
Evergreen Review, v.14, #79, June,
p. 37: " Soup, Cosmos and Tears."
, 1970
box
folder
12
1
Everyman, Summer, pp. 79-80, 82, 84:
"A Hot Day in Los Angeles," "the reading," "the drunk tank judge," "Directions,
Instructions, and Signs to the Indolent, the Bored, and the Insufficient," and
"panties."
, 1974
12
2
Fervent Valley, #1, Spring: "Power
Failure," and "For Those Who Put Themselves upon Me."
, 1972
12
3
Fervent Valley, #2, Summer: "six."
, 1972
12
4
Fireweed, v.1, #3, Spring, p. 26:
"rip-off."
, 1976
12
5
Fling, v.14, #4, September, p.15:
Hairy Fist Tales and "no quickies,"
and "remember."
, 1971
12
6
Fling, v.14, #5, November, p. 23:
Hairy Fist Tales and "The Looney
Ward."
, 1971
12
7
Fling, v.14, #6, January, p. 20:
Hairy Fist Tales and "dancing mind."
, 1972
12
8
Florida Education, v.42, #1,
September, p. 16: "The Priest and the Matador."
, 1963
12
9
Florida Education, v.42, #9, May,
pp. 16-17: "the day it rained at the los angeles county museum," "side of the
sun," "SUICIDE," "the tragedy of the leaves," "LOVE & DEATH & FAME,"
"old man, dead in a room," "horray say the roses," "THE KINGS ARE GONE."
, 1965
12
10
The Galley Sail, v.2, #2 (#6), June,
p. 12: "Conversation in a Cheap Room."
, 1960
12
11
Gambit, v.10, #11, November, pp. 8,
10-11: "style," "the rat," "Will the Real Mr. Bukowski Please Sit Down (To Know
Him is Not to Love Him)" by Liza Williams, "The Name's Familiar" on Peter
Hackford and film
Bukowski, author unknown.
, 1973
12
12
Gasolin 23, #6, October: "Junkies,"
"Bier," and "Bie Wind und Wetter."
, 1978
12
13
Gay Sunshine, #18, June-July, p.6:
"Harold Norse: an Interview" has section on C.B.
, 1973
12
14
Ghost-Dance, p. 14: "yellow sun
yellow cat eye kitchen floor."
, No
Date
12
15
The Grande Ronde Review, Fall: "The
Soi-disant Plaintiffs," review of
Run with the Hunted by A. Frederic
Franklin.
, 1964
12
16
The Grande Ronde Review, #6: "the
hairy fist, and love will die."
, 1966
12
17
Grist, #9, p.4: "hot" and "fire."
, No
Date
12
18
Half N' Half, April: "Shoelace."
, 1971
12
19
Hanging Loose, #15, August, pp. 3-4: "a threat to my
immortality" and "The Garbageman."
, 1971
12
20
The Harrison Street Review, #2, pp.
10-11: "Title: on Living with a Big Fat Whore who loves you..." and set of
drawings.
, No
Date
12
21
The Harrison Street Review, #3, pp.
10-11: "Roses are Red Violets are Blue," "the Great Poet," and "One Night
Stands."
, 1972
12
22
Hearse, #10: "The Days Run away like
Wild Horses over the Hills."
, 1969
12
23
Hearse, #11: "On Getting Famous and
Being Asked: Can you Recite? Can You Be There at Nine?."
, 1969
12
24
Hearse, #14: "Sheets."
, 1970
12
25
Hearse, #15: "Vallejo" and "The End
of the Funhouse."
, 1971
12
26
Hearse,
1972
Includes:
#17: "The Automobiles of De Longpre: (signed: For Linda
King from Her Great Lover-Poet. Charles Bukowski 12-30-72)
"The Beast"
"On the Wagon"
"Share the Pain"
"The Golfers"
"B.W."
"Man and Woman in Bed at Ten P.M."
"You Just Imagine"
"The Mockingbird"
"The Sex Fiends"
"I Was Clean Anyhow, I Think"
12
27
The Hiram Poetry Review, #1,
Fall-Winter, p. 8-9: "The Great One" and "sensible brush, sleeping/flower, I
awaken" (first lines).
, 1966
12
28
The Hiram Poetry Review, #5,
Fall-Winter, p.6: "Just Another Wind " and
The Human Voice (see
Entrails Anthology).
, 1968
12
29
Hustler, v.3, #6, December, p. 40:
"Interview: Charles Bukowski, Dialog with a Dirty Old Man."
, 1976
12
30
Hustler, v.3, #9, p. 66: "The Big
Dope Reading."
, 1977
12
31
Hustler, v. 4, #1, July, p.78:
"Workout."
, 1977
12
32
Hustler, v.4 #4, October, p. 52: "3
Chickens."
, 1977
12
33
Hustler, v.4, #11, May, p. 92: "An
Affair of Very Little Importance."
, 1978
box
folder
13
1
Intermission, v.1, #23, December, p.
17: letter from C.B. to Gene Cole (editor).
, 1965
13
2
Intermission, v.2 #29, March, p. 13:
"Notes on an Underground Existence."
, 1966
13
3
Intermission, Yearbook, p.1: "A
Rambling Essay on Poetics and the Bleeding Life Written While Drinking a
Six-pack (Tall)."
, 1966
13
4
Intrepid, #7, March: "Men's
Crapper."
, 1967
13
5
Intrepid, #8, June: letter from C.B.
to Allen DeLoach (editor).
, 1967
13
6
Intrepid, #9, December: "Poem for
the Death of an American Serviceman in Vietman," "A Bad Night--Blame the
Bourbon," and "From the Dept. of English."
, 1967
13
7
Intrepid, #11-12, March, pp. 54, 56:
"don't worry baby, I'll get it," "notebook," and "Poem to Charles Bukowski" by
Jack Micheline (this is a manuscript poem written inside back cover).
, 1969
13
8
Intrepid, #18-19, p. 124: "Hey
Bukowski" by James Silver.
, 1971
13
9
Intrepid, #23-24, Summer-Fall, p.
31: "Royal. tab clear. tab set. mar rel. back space."
, 1972
13
10
Invisible City, #1, February, pp.
3-6.
, 1971
Includes:
"here"
"style"
"ah"
"Rolled Again"
"You Might as Well Kiss Your Ass Goodbye"
"Songs of Death"
"The Last Days of the Suicide Kid"
"zoo"
"5 Men in Black Passing My Window"
"the bums at Phillipe's"
13
11
Invisible City, #2, June, p. 15:
"last act," "the American Flag Shirts," "drinking," "A Most Dark Night in
April," and "Upon 2 Deaths."
, 1970
13
12
Invisible City, #3, November, p. 9:
"The Writer," "2 carnations," "pleasure song," and "the shower."
, 1971
13
13
Invisible City, #5, February, p. 15:
"The Hatred for Hemingway."
, 1972
13
14
Invisible City, #7, October, p. 15:
"one more farewell," "the bells," and "madness."
, 1972
13
15
Kauri, #9, July-August, p. 9:
"Bukowski" by James Gove.
, 1965
13
16
Kauri, # 10, September-October, pp.
1, 3: "A Party Here--Machineguns, Tanks an Army Fighting Against Men on
Rooftops" and a letter from C.B. to Will Inman (editor).
, 1965
13
17
Knight, v.9, #7, October, p.17:
"Henry Miller Lives In Pacific Palisades and I Live on Skid Row Writing about
Sex."
, 1972
13
18
Komiks, #1, p.2: two excerpts from
C.B. letters.
, 1965
13
19
Komiks, #3: two excerpts from C.B.
letter.
, 1965?
13
20
The Lampeter Muse, v.3, #3, Fall,
p.4: "A Literary Romance."
, 1968
13
21
Laugh Literary and Man the Humping
Guns, v.1, #3, February, edited by C.B. and Neeli Cherry: "The Time I
Knocked out Ernest Hemingway and Was Discovered as a New Literary Giant" and
five excerpts from letters, D.B. for Neeli Cherry.
, 1971
13
22
Lemming, #1, Winter, pp. 5, 7: "The
Savior" and "I like that."
, 1971
13
23
Litmus Loadstone, #11: "The Hairy
Hairy Fist" and "Love Will Die."
, No
Date
13
24
The Little Magazine, v.6, #1,
Spring, pp. 14-15: "Bullshit Pain," and "The People."
, 1972
13
25
The Little Magazine, v.6, #2-3,
Summer-Fall, pp. 25-26: "The Brainless Eyes" and "The Sun, the Bushes, the Hell
of It--."
, 1972
13
26
Madrona, #2, Fall, p. 16: "The Best
Love Poem I Can Write at the Moment."
, 1971
13
27
Mag, #2, Winter, pp. 1-4: "Engraving
Found upon the Back of a Bill Sent to Me by the Southern California Gas
Company, Oct. 12th, 1971," "balling," "I found this atomic stockpile," and
"After the Party."
, 1972
13
28
Mag, #4, Summer, pp. 65, 68, 69:
"pop pop pop," "A Harder Knocker" and "the ants."
, 1972
13
29
Mag, #6, Summer-Fall: "the best love
poem I can write at the moment."
, 1973
box
folder
14
1
Mano-Mano, #2, July, pp. 48-49: "The
Angels of Sunday," and "ha ha ha ha ha, ha ha."
, 1971
14
2
Meatball, #2, p. 31:
A Bukowski Sampler, review, author
unknown.
, No
Date
14
3
Meatball, #8: "chilled green,"
"Several Feet by Three and One Half Feet Tall," "my special insanity," "story
and poem," and "In This Whirling Pot of Piss Some Songs Are Born."
, 1971
14
4
The MidAtlantic Review, v.1, #1,
Summer, pp. 15-17: "the lady poetess with long blonde hair and long silver
gown, standing tall and explaining to her audience how the muse CAME," "Big
Max," and "KRAZNICK."
, 1975
14
5
Moonstones, #2: "A Man Gets Tired."
, 1966
14
6
The New York Quarterly, #7, Summer,
pp. 26-28: "The Dogs Bark Knives," "Have You Ever Kissed a Panther?" and "The
Good Life at O'Hare Airport."
, 1971
14
7
The New York Quarterly, #8, Autumn,
pp. 27-28, 68: "Notes on a Door-Knocker," "Inverted Love Song" and photo of
C.B. by Claude Powell.
, 1971
14
8
The New York Quarterly, #9, Winter,
pp. 49-50: "style" and "My Literary Fly."
, 1972
14
9
The New York Quarterly, #10, Spring,
pp. 44, 46: "He Wrote in Lonely Blood" and "Law."
, 1972
14
10
The New York Quarterly, #11, Summer,
p. 118: announcement of an award for C.B.
, 1972
14
11
The New York Quarterly, #12, Autumn,
pp. 44, 46, 48-49: "Looking at the Cat's Balls," "the death of an idiot," "my
friend, Andre" and "5 dollars."
, 1972
14
12
The New York Quarterly, #13, Winter,
pp. 62-64: "Love," "back ups" and "the giraffes."
, 1973
14
13
The New York Quarterly, #14, Spring,
pp. 92-93: "the icecream people," "Man Mowing the Lawn Across the Way from Me"
and letter from C.B. to William Packard (editor).
, 1973
14
14
The New York Quarterly, #15, Summer,
pp. 78, 80-81, 83: "Contributors," "laugh literary," "Woman in the Supermarket"
and "200 Yards from the Surf."
, 1973
14
15
The New York Quarterly, #16, p. 63:
"The Avoidance of Boredom."
, 1974
14
16
The New York Quarterly, #17, p. 62:
"I Have Taken the Place of the Starving Artist I Used to Be (for Charles
Bukowski).
, 1975
14
17
The New York Quarterly, #18, pp. 48,
50-51: "poems," "sailing up your yellow river" and "big grey balloon things,
heavy."
, 1976
14
18
The New York Quarterly, #19, pp. 35,
102: "Who in Hell is Tom Jones?" and announcements of poetry awards.
, 1977
14
19
The New York Quarterly, #20, p. 35:
"Love" and letter from C.B. to William Packard (editor).
, 1978
14
20
The New York Quarterly, #21, pp.
29-30, 32-33: "Now She Hates Me," "That Chinaman Did Right?," "I Can Hear the
Sound of Human Lives Being Ripped to Pieces" and I Paid $3.00 to See Bukowski
Read."
, 1978
14
21
Nitty-Gritty, v.1, #1: "86'd"
broadside insert and
Poems Written Before Jumping Out Of An 8
Story Window, review, author unknown.
, 1975
14
22
Nomad, #5-6, Winter-Spring, pp. 5-6:
"So Much for the Knivers, so Much for the Bellowing Dawns," "Manifesto: a Call
for Our Own Critics" and ("the Day It Rained at the Los Angeles County Museum"
which is listed in the index but missing from this defective copy.)
, 1960
14
23
Notes From Underground, #3, p. 7:
"Should We Burn Uncle Sam's Ass?"
, No
Date
14
24
Notes From Underground, #11, pp. 47, 66: "A Nice Place"
and "All the White Rats."
, 1966
box
folder
15
1
Northwest Review, v.6, #2, Fall, p.
20: "A Drawer of Fish."
, 1963
15
2
Northwest Review, v.6, #4, Fall, pp.
121, 123: "Breakthrough" and "Charles Bukowski and the Savage Surfaces" by John
William Corrington.
, 1963
15
3
Northwest Review, v.13, #1, p. 19:
"59 Cents a Pound."
, 1978
15
4a
The Ohio Review, v.14, #2, Winter,
pp. 62-63: "little poem" and "Crime and Punishment."
, 1973
15
4b
Offprints of the Above.
, 1973
15
5
Ole, v.1, #1 (#1), November:
"watchdog," "freedom" and "age."
, 1964
15
6
Ole, #3, November: "Drunk Again and
Wondering, Wondering..." and notices of C.B. publications.
, 1965
15
7
Ole, #4, May: "O, We Are the
Outcasts, O We Burn in Wonderous Flame!"
, 1966?
15
8
Ole, #5: "The Old Pro" an
introduction to the poetry of Harold Norse (this issue is devoted to the poetry
of Norse).
, 1966?
15
9
Ole, #6, July: "Nature Poem" and
"The Noiseless Car of a Blue Violet."
, 1966
15
10
Ole, #7, May: reviews by C.B.,
The Anatomy of Love and Other Poems
by John William Corrington,
A Test of Poetry by Louis Zukofsky,
Change of Address and Other Poems by
Kathleen Fraser, and
Empty Mirror by Allen Ginsberg.
, 1967
15
11
Ole, #8, April: "Love Makes Its Gun
into the Horrible Cut on Life."
, 1967
15
12
Ole Anthology: "Freedom", "age" and
"O We Are the Outcasts, O We Burn in Wonderous Flame" (this is a presentation
copy to C.B. signed by the editor Douglas Blazek).
, 1967
15
13
Open Skull, #1, pp. 11-12: letter
from Alan Bleven to C.B. and letter from Al Purdy to C.B.
, 1967
15
14
Out of Sight, #90(?): "Mine."
, No
Date
15
15
Outcry, #1: "Room Service."
, 1962
15
16
P-A-N, Summer, p. 10: "I need and I
demand."
, 1977
15
17
The Painted Bride Quarterly, v.2,
#4, Fall, pp. 14, 16: "mean and stingy" and "Nava, and life."
, 1975
15
18
Paris Match #1532, October 6, p. 48:
"A Bout Portant...Charles Bukowski" author unknown.
, 1978
15
19
Pearl, #3, Spring-Summer, pp. 50-51:
"the big ride" and "tables."
, 1978
15
20
Pebble, #9, Winter: "A Day at the
Oak Tree Meet" and "Coffee and Babies."
, 1972
15
21
Pebble, #12, Winter: "Piss and Shit"
and "Paper Clips."
, 1974-1975
15
22
Playboy Deutschland, #12, December,
p. 71: "Playboy Interview: Charles Bukowski."
, 1977
15
23
Playboy Deutschland, July (?), p.
95: "Das passiert nur mis."
, 1978(?)
15
24
Phoo: "Moyamensing Prison."
, 1969
box
folder
16
1
Poetry Newsletter, #7, February-March:
Confessions of a Man Insane Enough to Live
with Beasts, review author unknown.
, 1966
16
2
Poetry Now, v. 1, #2 (#2), p. 24:
"Cooperation."
, 1974
16
3
Poetry Now, v.1, #3 (#3), p. 24:
"The Man She Saw at the Racetrack."
, 1974
16
4
Poetry Now, v.1, #5 (#5), p. 25: "Hooked."
, 1974
16
5
Poetry Now, v. 1, #6, (#6), pp. 2-3:
"2 horsecollars," "The First Love," "Your Own Toilet," "The Strangest Sight You
Ever Did See--" and "Charles Bukowski."
, 1974
16
6
Poetry Now, v.2, #1 (#7), p. 30:
"The Red Porsche."
, 1975
16
7
Poetry Now, v.2, #2 (#8), p. 27:
"The Proud Thin Dying."
, 1975
16
8
Poetry Now, v.2, #4 (#10), p. 16:
"The Voice of the Bukowski."
, 1975
16
9
Poetry Now, v.3, #1 (#13), p. 41:
"This One Poet."
, 1976
16
10
Prism International, v.6, #3,
Spring, p.44: "The Seminar."
, 1976
16
11
Pulse, #4, Summer/Fall: "cancer of
the eyeball," "The Grammar of Life," "a need for glue" and letter from C.B. to
Norm Moser (editor).
, 1971
16
12
Purr, #1: "Bluebird" and "(a poem
written in a letter to Linda King, Feb. 29, 1971...still pertinent...1975)."
, 1975
16
13
Purr, #2: "my lucky friend," "It
Works Like Liquid Snot coming out of Fire Hoses" and two full page drawings by
C.B.
, 1975
16
14
Pure Smutte, #1, November: "the sea
walked in and out," "on the sidewalks and in the sun" and "the lady
excecutives."
, 1972
16
15
Quarry, #3, p. 31: "wide and
revolving."
, 1973
16
16
Quicksilver, v. 14, #3, Autumn, p.
18: "Vegas."
, 1961
16
17
Quixote (Madison, Wisconsin), v.4,
#9, p. 157:
Poems Written Before Jumping Our of an 8
Story Window, review, author unknown.
, No
Date
16
18
Quixote (New York/Great Britain),
#19, p. 27: "Hell Yes, the Hydrogen Bomb."
, 1958
16
19
Rama, v.4, #1, p. 73: "Notes of a
Dirty Old Man."
, 1974
16
20
Renaissance, v.1 #1, July, p. 73:
"the way to review a play and keep everybody happy but me."
, 1961
16
21
Renaissance, v.1, #4, p. 96: "peace,
baby, is hard sell" and letter from C.B. to John Bryan.
, 1962
16
22
Rogner's Magazin, #9, September, pp.
69, 74, 198:
Women (excerpt), "Bukowski" by
Jörg Fauser with photos by M. Montfort, ad for
Romane Und Stories with photo, and
cover painting of C.B.
, 1977
16
23
rongWrong, #4, p. 1: "Something in
Me Wants to Sing and Scream All Day Long."
, No
Date
16
24
The San Francisco Book Review, #22,
June, p. 24-27: " THE FLOWER LOVE," "Notes on the Life of an Aged Poet," "Love
and Fame and Death" and "I Met a Genius."
, 1972
16
25
The San Francisco Quarterly, v.6,
#1, Winter: "Charles Bukowski is the Top Dog" by Tony Qualiano.
, 1970
16
26
Schist, #1, Fall, p. 7, 9: "These
Little Talks in Room #109 with This Guy Called Harry" and a drawing.
, 1973
16
27
Schist, #2, Summer, p. 52: "The New
One."
, 1974
16
28
Schist, #3, Spring, p. 24: "problems
about the other woman" and "a class broad."
, 1975
box
folder
17
1
Sciamachy, #5, pp. 9-10: "Existence"
and "Notice."
, 1963
17
2
Scree, #5, pp. 35-37: "alone with
everybody," "milk a cow and get milk," "the insane always loved me" and "the
meaning."
, 1976
17
3
Scree, #7, pp. 14-15, 20: "theis
then--," "a killer," "sex" and a drawing.
, 1976
17
4
Second Aeon, #13, pp. 77-79: "slim
killer," "poem for Dante" and "the conditions."
, 1971?
17
5
Second Aeon, #14: "burning."
, No
Date
17
6
Second Aeon, #16/17, pp. 53, 57:
"assault" and "a poorly night."
, No
Date
17
7
Scond Coming, v.1, #2, Summer:
"Burning in Water, Drowning in Flame."
, 1972
17
8
Second Coming, v.2, #3, (special
C.B. issue).
, No
Date
Includes:
"Six Inches"
"He Beats His Women"
"Love Poem to Marina"
"Poem to a Man in Jail"
"Layover"
"The Knifer"
"Beerbottle"
"Don't Come Around But If You do..."
Letters
Articles/Poems/Letter by Steve Richmond, Neeli Cherry,
George Tsongas, Jerry Kamstra, Jack Micheline, Harold Norse, Guy Williams, Ann
Menebroker, Alta, Gerald Locklin, G.J. Melling, Linda King, and Hugh Fox.
17
9
Second Coming, v.2, #4/5, Summer, p.
34: "In the Name of Love and Art."
, 1973
17
10
Second Coming, v.5, #1: Special
C.B., A.D. Winans, Ed "Foots" Lipman issue.
, 1977
Includes:
"The Crunch"
"Through and Through"
"Goodbye, Goodbye, Clipped-winged Bluebird"
"I'm as Crazy as I Ever Was"
"V.G."
"Hunchback"
"Be Alone"
"Melancholia and the Redhead"
"Carrot"
"Poet and Poetess..."
"The Poem of the Empty bed"
"Weep"
"Against the Tide:
"Time"
"light Brown"
"The Promise"
"Waving and Waving Goodbye"
"The 6 Foot Goddess"
"Longshot"
"Beer"
"How to Be a Great Writer"
"Bedpans"
"Carltton Way off of Western"
""462-0614"
"For A.D."
Photo of C.B.
17
11
The Serif, v.8, #4, December, p. 24:
an untitled prose piece about d.a. levy and Jon Webb.
, 1971
17
12
Shaded Room, #1, March, p. 41:
Poems Written Before Jumping Out of an 8
Story Window review, author unknown.
, 1970
17
13
The Shore Review, #12/13, pp. 26,
28, 29, 30-31: "Moths," "The Drill," "Soul," "Did You ever Think about that?,"
and "The Experts."
, 1974
17
14
Showcase, #2, November-December, pp.
6-7: "The High-rise of the New World" and "On the Train to Del Mar."
, 1965
17
15
Showcase, #3, July: "Poem for My
Daughter" and "Good Morning."
, 1966
17
16
Signet, v.3, #12, December, pp.
9-10: "The Ants" and "Ringed Bathrub, Peacock or Hell."
, 1961
17
17
Simbolica, #21: "Ample Sewers" and
"Dialogue: Dead Man on a Fence."
, No
Date
17
18
Simbolica, #22, pp. 14-17: "Some
Notes on Bach and Hayden" "6x9," "Till Eulenspiegal and Me," "Primer for
Students of Love" and "The Powerful Way of Mystery Is L(k)e a Glad(io)la
Bl(oo)***ing."
, No
Date
17
19
Silver, pp. 25, 29: "iron and stone:
and "down on the row."
, 1972
17
20
Sixpack, #2, August, pp. 53-54:
Erections, Ejaculations, Exhibitions and
General Tales of Ordinary Madness, review by Pierre Joris, and
Mockingbird Wish Me Luck, review by
R.M.
, 1972
17
21
Small Press Review, v.4, #4 (#16),
May, (special C.B. issue): "Upon the Mathematics of the Breath and the Way," "A
Poem as a City," "Style," (these are quoted in separate articles),
articles/poems about C.B. by Tony Qualiano, Sandy Dorbin, Harold Norse, William
Packard, Linda King, Felix Pollack, Len Fulton, photos of C.B. and photo of
Linda King's sculpture of C.B.
, 1973
17
22
some/thing, v.2, #1, Winter:
"Drawing of a Band Concert on a Match Box."
, 1966
17
23
Southern California Lit Scene, v.1,
#1, December, pp. 30-31: "Looking for the Giants" an interview by William
Robson and Josette Bryson and photos of C.B., cover.
, 1971
17
24
Spectroscope, v.1, #1, April: "Essay
on Nothing for Your Mother--Nothingness" and "The Devious good of Rescuing the
Suffering."
, 1966
17
25
Steppenwolf, #4, autumn, p. 31:
"Quits."
, 1970
17
26
Stern Magazin, February, p. 68:
"Heissgeliebter Drecksack" by Wilhelm Bittorf.
, 1978
17
27
Stonecloud, #2, pp. 19-20, 95: "a
radio with guts," "Trouble with Spain" and "I can't see anything."
, 1973
17
28
Stooge, #3: "shoelace," "my hell," "nothing for a
title...," "o, yes" and "A Bottomless Joint on Sunset near Western."
, No
Date
box
folder
18
1
Stump, #1: "One for Blaise
Cendrars."
, 1973
18
2
Summer Madness: "The Places a Poem
Can Take You."
, No
Date
18
3
The Sunset Palms Hotel, v.2, #4,
Spring: cover and two other drawings by C.B.
, 1974
18
4
The Sunset Palms Hotel, v.4, #7,
Winter: "Death."
, 1976
18
5
the, #13: "me" and "F.F. (for G. and
C.)."
, No
Date
18
6
Throb, #1, Spring, pp. 2-5: "Bug,"
"Summer," "The Elements" and "Summer."
, 1971
Today, v.21, #7, April, p. 30:
"Charles Bukowski: Outsider No. 1" by Jay Robert Nash with photos.
, 1966
18
9
Twen, April, pp. 5, 60: "Der Tag, an
dem wir über James Thurber sprachen" and biographical sketch with
photos.
, 1971
18
10
Underground Digest, v.1, #2, March,
p.76: "Notes of a Dirty Old Man."
, 1967
18
11
Unmuzzled Ox, v.1, November, pp.
16-17: "Poem" and "Tragedy Is My Bacon."
, 1971
18
12
Unmuzzled Ox, v.1, #4, February, p.
42: "Goodyear."
, 1972
18
13
Unmuzzled Ox, v.4, #2, Autumn: "
"3:16 and One Half..."
, 1972
18
14
Unmuzzled Ox, v.4, #2: "One for
R.O."
, 1976
18
15
Vagabond, v.1, #2, p. 23: "I will
Never Ride a Horse along the Sands of Normandy or against the Sides of Your
Brain, Lilac-raining Like It Is Tonight."
, 1966
18
16
Vagabond: "The Flower Lover," "I Met
a Genius" and notes with drawing of C.B.
, 1967
18
17
Vagabond, #10, p. 3: "Fat upon the
Land."
, 1971
18
18
Vagabond, #11, p. 41: "The
Shoelace."
, 1971
18
19
Vagabond, #12, p. 16: "Dirge."
, 1971
18
20
Vagabond, #13, pp. 21-22, 24: "A
Man's Woman," "The Snake in the Watermelon" and "Work-fuck Problems."
, 1972
18
21
Vagabond, #15, pp. 38, 40: ""99
degrees" and "The Oldest Hippie in the World."
, 1972
18
22
Vagabond, #17, p. 12: "visit to
Venice."
, 1973
18
23
The Willie, #1, Summer: "The
Kiss-off" and "One Hundred and Ninetyseven Degrees."
, 1967
18
24
The Willie, #2, Spring: "bogart in
the world of the dead."
, 1968
18
25
Willmore City, #2/3, Fall, p. 8:
"the good life."
, 1975
18
26
Wormwood, #12, v.3, #4, pp. 19-20,
27: "It's not /who lived here/but who died here" (first lines), "Poem for My
43rd. Birthday," "The End" and "The Vulgar Sounds Rise My Misery."
, 1963
18
27
Wormwood, #13, v.4, #1, p. 23: "The
Hours."
, 1964
18
28
Wormwood, #20, v.4, #4, pp. 16-18:
"finish," "Female and Breakdown and Peace" and "6.21 P.M.."
, 1965
18
29
Wormwood, #21, v.5, #1, pp. 23-25:
"dear friend," "One Hundred and Ninetynine Pounds of Clay Leaning Forward" and
"a world, really--."
, 1966
18
30
Wormwood, #22, v.5, #2, pp. 6-7:
"Note on a Bluebird Flying Past My Window," In This Place We Eat Apples and Cut
Our Fingers on Beercans" and "anything."
, 1966
18
31
Wormwood, #24, v.6, #4:
Night's Work (centerfold chapbook
with C.B. drawings).
, 1966
Includes:
"Buffalo Bill"
"a little atomic bomb"
"The colored Birds"
"Somebody always breaking my dainty solitude..."
"fag, fag, fag"
The Screw-Game"
"a beginner's bibliography of bukowski" author unknown but
probably Marvin Malone.
18
32
Wormwood, #27/28, v.7, #3/4, p. 20:
quoted blurb.
, 1967
18
33
Wormwood, #29, v.8, #2, pp. 21-22:
"One for Ging, with Klux top" and "footnote upon the construction of the
masses."
, 1968
18
34
Wormwood, #30, v.8, #2, pp. 30, 35:
"No Hole in the Sky," At the Hour of the Daily Reckoning" and "Bukowski" by
Hugh Fox.
, 1968
18
35
Wormwood, #31, v.8, #3, p. 34: "The
Underground."
, 1968
18
36
Wormwood, #33, v.9, #1, p. 13: "the
ladies still don't care."
, 1969
18
37
Wormwood, #39, v.10, #3, pp. 94-96:
" A Correction to a Lady of Poetry," "A Warm Afternoon Just Off Sunset
Boulevard," "yes," and "boil near left elbow."
, 1970
18
38
Wormwood, #40, v.10, #4, pp.
150-151: "16 Jap Machinegun Bullets" and "When All the Animals Lie Down."
, 1970
18
39
Wormwood, #41, v.11, #1, p. 33:
"looking for Jack Micheline."
, 1971
18
40
Wormwood, #42, v.11, #2, pp. 65-66:
"the bombing of Berlin," "the great writer" and "Ice."
, 1971
18
41
Wormwood, #43, v.11, #3, p. 117:
"hey, hank."
, 1971
18
42
Wormwood, #44, v.11, #4, pp.
132-134: "something on Berlioz," "the butvher" and "my landlady."
, 1971
18
43
Wormwood, #45, v.12, #1, p. 3: "The
Outsider" essay on Jon Edgar Webb.
, 1972
18
44
Wormwood, #46, v.12, #2, p. 63: "The
Smoking Car" and "Poetry, You Whore..."
, 1972
18
45
Wormwood, #47. v/12. #3, pp. 103-104: "I met this woman,"
and "the painter."
, 1972
18
46
Wormwood, #48, v. 12, #4, p. 135:
"The Last Poetry Reading."
, 1972
18
47
Wormwood, #49, v.13, #1. p. 38:
"Daylight Saving" and "Born to Lose."
, 1973
box
folder
19
1
Wormwood, #50, v.13, #2, pp. 69-70:
"The Angels Say Keep Going" and "Vacancy."
, 1973
19
2
Wormwood, #51, v.13, #3, pp.
114-116: "our song," "my afternoons into night" and "Bukowski."
, 1973
19
3
Wormwood, #53, v.14, #1: 55
Beds in the Same Direction
(centerfold chapbook).
, 1964
Includes:
"200 years"
"finish"
"55 beds in the same direction:
"well, now that Ezra has died..."
"tarot"
"Eleven"
"no bra, no panties"
"a bit of light for the toad"
"demise"
19
4
Wormwood, #55, v.14, #2, pp.
107-108: "girls coming home in their cars," 75 million dollars" and "some
picnic."
, 1974
19
5
Wormwood, #56, v.14, #4, p. 151:
"Bukowski at His Best" by Gerald Locklin.
, 1974
19
6
Wormwood, #57, v. 15, #1, pp. 38,
40-41: "Poor Trochi," "Fair Stand the Fields of France and Negation," "Round
Trip--for T.H." and "There's People in Places Where Snow Lives."
, 1974
19
7
Wormwood, #60, v.15, #4, pp.
117-119: ""Look for That Guy," "An Old Fan," "Shoot Me in the Leg, Shouts the
Sky; Some Good Soul Does as the Sawdust Fall Through--" and "Kiss Me."
, 1975
19
8
Wormwood, #62, v.16, #2, pp. 78-80:
"Cloud 9," "I Like to Look up at the Ceiling/for Designs in the Cracks" and
"Susan's Sunset and Western."
, 1976
19
9
Wormwood, #64, v.16, #4, pp.
142-144: "Free," "Utah" and "Let's Be Original."
, 1976
19
10
Wormwood, #65/66, v.17, #1/2, p. 44:
"Blinks a Little Spot of Senseless Yellow in the Middle of It All."
, 1977
19
11
Writers Forum, v.3, #4, Spring, p.
35: "Propoganda."
, 1967
19
12
Yellow Brick Road, #4: "this one
poet."
, 1975
19
13
Uknown title, may be an issue of
Runcible Spoon, August: "dooby do do
do," "the shit shits," "shoot the goat through the head and paint the bones
green" and "the vast area of space nothingness with snakes crawling through me
and you and everything--."
, 1970
Includes: Books, anthology, appearances, introductions, photos,
broadsides, presentation copies, acrylic drawings by C.B., a critical study,
statement of income, and racing forms. Additional oversized miscellaneous
materials are continued in Series VI.
box
folder
19
14
Poetas de Hoy en los Estados Unidos,
edited by Miller Williams, Santiago, Chile, Ministerios de Educación, p.
116 : "The Tragedy of the leaves," and "La Tragedia de las Hojas by Cinna
Lomnitz.
, 1966
19
15
Z: An Anthology of Revolutionary
Poetry edited by Dan Georgakas, New York, Smyrna Press, p. 21: "The
Tragedy of the Leaves" and "Ho Chi Minh."
, 1968
19
16
Mad Windows, edited by Phill Perry,
Notre Dame, Indiana, Lit Press, p. 40: "These Made Windows That Taste Life and
Cut Me if I Go through Them."
, 1969
19
17
Holy Doors: An Anthology of Poetry, Prose,
and Criticism, edited by William J. Robson, Long Beach, California
p102: letter from C.B. to William J. Robson and letters and commentary with
various references to C.B.
, 1972
19
18
The Venice Poetry Company Presents,
edited by Ted Simmons, Los Angeles, Venice Poetry Company Association, pp. 19,
39: "It's All in the Burning" and "the bombing of Berlin."
, 1972
19
19
Anthology of L.A. Poets, edited by
C.B., Neeli Cherry and Paul Vangelisti, Los Angeles, Laugh Literary/Red Hill
Press:
, 1972
Includes:
"A Forward to These Poems," "29 Chilled
Grapes," "another academy," 'if we take--" and "style."
19
20
Invitation to a Dying, Al Maserik,
Redwood City, California, Vagabond Press: "An Introduction to These Poems."
, 1972
19
21
Contemporary Poetry n America, edtied by Miler Williams,
New York, Random House, pp. 60-61.
, 1973
Includes:
"The Human Condition"
"The Tragedy of the Leaves"
"The Singular Self"
"footnote upon the construction of the masses"
"For Jane"
19
22
Specimen 73: A Catalog of Poets for the
Season, edited by Paul Vangelisti, Pasadena, California, Pasadena
Museum of Modern Art.
, 1973
Includes:
"The Priest and the Matador"
"another academy"
"Old Man Dead in a Room"
"Law"
"Love and Fame and Death"
"if we take--"
19
23
Something Else yearbook, edtied by Jan Herman, West
Glover, Vermont, Something Else Press Inc., p. 108: "A Poem to Myself."
, 1974
19
24
Earth Rose, Steve Richmond, Santa
Monica, California, Earth Books - presentation copy to C.B.: "Forward."
, 1974
19
25
Intrepid Anthology: A Decade & Then
Some, Contemporary Literature, edited by Allen De Loach, Buffalo, New
York, Intrepid Presspp. 27-30: "Overtime," "The Girl Outside of Strawberry
Patch # One," "Another One of My Critics" and "The Police Helicopter."
, 1976
19
26
California Bicentennial Poets
Anthology, edited by A.D. Winans, San Francisco, Second Coming Press,
pp. 17-20: "For Jane," "The Tragedy of the Leaves," "The Priest and the
Matador," and "Something for the Touts, the Nuns, the Grocery Clerks and
You..."
, 1976
19
27
Hierophant, #1: presentation copy
from the editor Tom Kerrigan.
, 1969
19
28
The Tibetan Stroboscope, d.a.levy,
Cleveland, Ayizan Press: presentation copy from the author.
, 1968
box
folder
20
1
Notes of a Dirty Old Man, North
Hollywood, Essex House.
, 1969
20
2
We'll Take Them, Santa Barbara,
Black Sparrow Press, (
Sparrow 72, last of the series).
, 1978
20
3
Dear Mr. Bukowski, San Luis Obispo,
California, Garage Graphics, (44/50, signed). Text and drawings by C.B.
Silkscreened by Ray Hartman onto 11 cards plus colophon, inserted into envelope
with ribbon tie.
, 1979
20
4
Kargo, Thomas Brasch, Frankfurt am
Main, Suhrkamp Verlag: presentation copy from author.
, 1977
20
5
Racing forms from Hollywood Park, each has been work out
and signed.
, 1980
20
6
Various miscellaneous items.
, No
Date
Includes:
"An Answer to a Critic of Sorts", Phoenix(?), 1975(?),
Broadside.
Photos (nine) of C.B., two with unidentified friends, one
with Linda King sculpture.
Statement of income/expenses for tax purposes.
A poem, a group of nine poems, a drawing by unidentified
persons.
Photos (three) of two unidentified women.
20
7
Charles Bukowski: Notes from the American
Underground, Doub Pibel, probably a graduate paper.
, 1977
Der Mann Mit Der Ledertasche (Post
Office), translated by Hans Hermann, Köln, Verlag Kiepenheuer &
Witsch.
, 1974
21
2
Der Mann Mit Der Ledertasche,
translated by Hans Hermann, München, Duetscher Taschenbuch Verlag.
, 1977
21
3
Gedichte Die Einer Schrieb Bevor Er Im 8. Stockwerk Aus Dem
Fenster Sprang (selections from:
Poems Written Before Jumping Out of an 8
Story Window,
The Days Run Away Like Wild Horses Over the
Hills,
At Terror Street and Agony Way),
translated by Carl Weissner, Gersthofen, Maro Verlag.
, 1974
21
4
Nervöse Blätter1:
Gedichte-Bilder-Geschichten Lesebuch (selections from:
Poems Written Before Jumping Out of an 8
Story Window,
The Days Run Away Like Wild Horses Over the
Hills,
Mockingbird Wish Me Luck),
translated by Carl Weissner, Herbert Graf, Jürgen Theobaldy and Rolf
Eckart John, Koln, Palmenpresse.
, 1974
21
5
Flinke Killer (selections from:
A Bukowski Sampler,
Burning in Water Drowning in Flame,
Crucifix in a Deathhand,
Mockingbird Wish Me Luck,
The Days Run Away Like Wild Horses Over the
Hills,
While the Music Played), translated
by Carl Weissner and Rolf Eckart John, Köln, Palmenpresse.
, 1977
21
6
Western Avenue: Gedichte Aus Über 20
Jahren, 1955-1977 (selections from:
It Catches My Heart in It Hands,
Crucifix in a Deathhand,
At Terror Street and Agony Way,
The Days Run Away Like Wild Horses Over the
Hills,
Mockingbird Wish me Luck,
Africa, Paris, Greece,
Burning in Water Drowning in Flame,
Maybe Tomorrow), translated by Carl
Weissner, Frankfurt am Main, Zweitausendeins.
, 1979
21
7
Terpentin on the Rocks: Die Bestes Gedichte
Aus Der Amerikanischen Alternativpresse, 1966-1977, edited by C.B. and
Carl Weissner, translated by Carl Weissner, Augsburg, Maro Verlag. C.B. poems
on p. 15.
, 1978
21
8
Kaputt In Hollywood (a selection
from Erections, Ejaculations, Exhibitions and General Tales of Ordinary
Madness), tranlsated by Carl Weissner, Augsburg, Maro Verlag.
, 1978
21
9
Geburt, Leben Und Tod Einer
Untergrundzeitung (a selection from
Kaputt In Hollywood), translated by
Carl Weissner, Heerhugowaard, Netherlands, Giftwerg-Presse.
, 1978
21
10
Fuck Machine (a selection from
Ejaculations...), translated by Wulf
Teichmann, München, Carl Hanser Verlag.
, 1977
21
11
Das Leben Und Sterben Im Uncle Sam
Hotel ( a selection from Ejaculations...), translated by Carl Weissner,
Augsburg, Maro Verlag.
, 1978
21
12
Aufzeichnungen Eines Aussenseiters (
Notes Of A Dirty Old Man),
translated by Carl Weissner, Frankfurt am Main, Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag.
, 1973
21
13
Die Stripperinnen Vom Burbank (
South of No North), translated by
Carl Weissner, Frankfurt am Main, Zweitausendeins.
, 1979
21
14
Stories Und Romane (
South of No North, translated by
Carl Weissner;
Faktotum, translated by Carl
Weissner;
Der Mann Mit Der Ledertasche,
translated by Hans Hermann;
Anmerkugen Eines Dirty Old Man,
translated by Carl Weissner, Frankfurt am Main, Zweitausendeins.
, 1977
box
folder
22
1
L'Amour Est Un Chien De L'Enfer (
Love Is A Dog From Hell), translated
by Gérard Guégan, Paris, Le Sagittaire - v.1 orange cover with
C.B. drawing and v.2 pink cover with photo of C.B.
, 1978
22
3
Factotum, translated by Marisa
Caramella, Milano, Sugarco Edizioni.
, 1979
22
4
Poesie (1955-1973), (selection from:
It Catches My Heart In Its Hands, Crucifix In A Deathhand, At Terror Street and
Agony Way, The Days Run Away Like Wild Horses Over the Hills, Mockingbird Wish
me Luck, Burning In Water Drowning In Flame), uknown translator, Milano,
Arnoldo Mondadori Editore.
, 1979
22
5
L'Amore É Un Cane Che Viene
Dall'Inferno (
Love Is A Dog From Hell), translated
by Paola Ludovici andGiogio Mariani, Roma, Savelli.
, 1979
22
6
A Sud Di Nessun Nord (
South of No North), translated by
Marisa Caramella, Milano, Sugarco Edizioni.
, 1979
22
7
Se Busca Una Mujer (South of No
North), translated by
Jorge García Berlanga,
Barcelona, Editorial Anagrama.
, 1979
22
8
Postkantoor (
Post Office), translated by Susan
Janssen, Amsterdam, De Bezige Bij.
, 1977
22
9
Offprint of a poem - source and translator unknown.
, No
Date
22
10
Offprint of a poem - source and translator unknown.
, No Date
22
11
Post Office, London, London Magazine
Editions.
, 1974
Includes: Original appearances, reviews of C.B. books, interviews,
commentary, book covers, book announcements, other miscellaneous writings,
graffiti.
box
folder
23
1
Open City (San Francisco).
, May 12, 1967-December 14,
1967
23
2
Open City (San Francisco).
, December 29, 1967-December 26,
1968
23
3
Open City (San Francisco). Also as
an enclosure in San Francisco
Phoenix #43, #47, and #54.
, January 24, 1967-March 6, 1968
23
4
Times (Berkley).
, September 19, 1969-September
25, 1969.
23
5
Nola Express (New Orleans),
#89-#107.
, 1971-June 8,
1972
23
6
Nola Express (New Orleans),
#109-#121.
, June 23, 1972-January 4,
1973
23
7
Nola Express (New Orleans),
#122-#134.
, January 4, 1973-July 5,
1973
23
8
Nola Express (New Orleans),
#135-#144. Also three early issues un-numbered and undated.
, July 13, 1974-December 13,
1973
23
9
Free Press (Los Angeles).
March 17, 1967; February 11, 1972-July 14,
1972.
23
10
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, July 21, 1972-December 22,
1972
23
11
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, January 5, 1973-April 27,
1973
23
12
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, May 11, 1973-October 26,
1973
23
13
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, November 2, 1973-December 28,
1973
23
14
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, January 4, 1974-March 22,
1974
23
15
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, March 29, 1974-May 31,
1974
23
16
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, June 14, 1974-October 4,
1974
23
17
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, October 11, 1974-December 20,
1974
23
18
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, January 3, 1975-May 29,
1975
23
19
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, May 30, 1975-August 28,
1975
23
20
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, August 29, 1975-January 1,
1976
23
21
Free Press (Los Angeles).
, January 2, 1976-September 9,
1976
23
22
Other Writings: Poetry, Prose Excerpts, Reviews.
No Date
23
23
Reviews of C.B. Books.
, No
Date
23
24
Interviews with and Commentary on C.B.
, No
Date
23
25
Other Magazine Appearances:
Boulevards (interview), The Earth
Rose (poems),
Renaissance (poems/drawings),
Renaissance (issue edited by C.B.).
, No
Date
23
26
Book Announcements and Covers: Flyers with Quotes and
Drawings by C.B.
, No
Date
23
27
Graffiti.
, No
Date
23
28
Menu (for Linda Lee Beighle's restaurant) Drawn and
Hand-lettered by C.B.
, No
Date
box
24
Readings: Announcements, Posters, Broadsides.
, No
Date