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Portions from a Wine-Stained Notebook:…
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Portions from a Wine-Stained Notebook: Uncollected Stories and Essays, 1944-1990 (édition 2008)

par Charles Bukowski (Auteur), David Calonne (Directeur de publication)

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2115129,476 (4)1
Ce recueil de chroniques et de nouvelles inedites met en evidence la richesse et la variete de l'oeuvre de Bukowski. Ses deux premieres histoires temoignent de la double orientation stylistique qui marquera toute sa carriere de prosateur - Contrecoup d'une lettre de refus plus longue qu'a l'ordinaire (1944) trace le portrait imaginaire d'un jeune artiste epris d'ideal, un rebelle double d'un amuseur tandis que dans 20 chars de plus, et Kasseldown tombait (1946), il change de ton et donne dans la noirceur absolue. Bukowski confronte son personnage de prisonnier a une desesperante solitude spirituelle, comme s'il ecrivait lui aussi du fond du souterrain, piege dans une cellule trop petite pour un homme de sa carrure, mais qui s'en sort grace a son sens de l'humour et a son gout de l'autoderision.Dans sa derniere meditation sur l'ecriture, Les Bases, 1991, Bukowski apure les comptes et tire la lecon Plus mes phrases se rapprocheraient de la concision et du naturel, moins j'aurais de chances de me tromper et de tricher... Les mots etaient des balles, des rayons de soleil, ils n'avaient d'autre but que de contrarier le destin et mettre un terme a la damnation.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:JaredOrlando
Titre:Portions from a Wine-Stained Notebook: Uncollected Stories and Essays, 1944-1990
Auteurs:Charles Bukowski (Auteur)
Autres auteurs:David Calonne (Directeur de publication)
Info:City Lights Publishers (2008), Edition: First Edition, 300 pages
Collections:Votre bibliothèque
Évaluation:*****
Mots-clés:Aucun

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Portions from a Wine-Stained Notebook: Uncollected Stories and Essays, 1944-1990 par Charles Bukowski

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5 sur 5
I started to give this three stars because it's the worst Bukowski I've read; however, it's a collection of diverse quality and there are several gems so good that they make the book worth reading: A Rambling Essay on Poetics, etc., I Meet the Master and Basic Training and Dirty Old Man Confesses. It's worth reading to see how Bukowski handles parataxis, how he constructs sentences, how he is so open it hurts and to see what his politics are (he is claimed by both the left and the right but this book makes clear he was neither). ( )
  DinoReader | Aug 21, 2014 |
it was great to be able to read some of his writings that were published long ago but not reprinted.
  terrycooper | Jun 20, 2011 |
One of the great things about Bukowski's essays and short stories is that you can read one or two and move on. It can take time to read a whole book, for me at least.

This collection is Uncollected Short Stories and Essays, 1944-1990. Some of the stories feel vaguely familiar, like I've read them before. I think I just recall the stories from Buk interviews and documentaries.

There are lots of stories to choose from but my favorites are his Notes from a Dirty Old Man, Just Passing Time, and I Meet the Master. I Meet The Master is about Chinaski meeting Bante...or Bukowski meeting Fante. A good piece of work about finally meeting your idol that includes some standout lines:

"It was obvious: what happened to people, good people, bad people, even terrible people, hardly seemed fair."

"It's when you hide things that you choke on them."

I ended up with a book that was underlined and dog-earred. Bukowski really sums up himself with "Genius could be the ability to say a profound thing in a simple way."

Not a wasted word in sight. ( )
  manadabomb | Mar 8, 2009 |
Anything newly published by Hank comes close to reading rapture, especially something like this which contains his prose. The only reason this didn't get five stars is some of the stories are redundant and some were, well, just not...representative of Hank's better writing. Nonetheless, there were some laughs, some curses, some broken bottles, and the best tale was by far his recount of meeting his idol, John Fante.
  NateJordon | Feb 26, 2009 |
Charles Bukowski (1920-1994), one of the most outrageous and controversial figures of 20th-century American literature, was so prolific that many important pieces were never collected during his lifetime. Portions is a substantial selection of these wide-ranging works, most of which have been unavailable since their original appearance in underground newspapers, literary journals, even porno mags. Among the highlights are his first published short story, "Aftermath of a Lengthy Rejection Slip"; his last short story, "The Other"; his first and last essays; and the first installment of his famous "Notes of a Dirty Old Man" column. The book contains meditations on his familiar themes (drinking, horse-racing, etc.) as well as singular discussions of such figures as Artaud, Pound, and the Rolling Stones. Other significant works include the experimental title piece; a fictionalized account of meeting his hero, John Fante ("I Meet the Master"); an unflinching review of Hemingway (“An Old Drunk Who Ran Out of Luck”); the intense, autobiographical “Dirty Old Man Confesses”; and several discussions of his aesthetics (“A Rambling Essay on Poetics and the Bleeding Life Written While Drinking a Six-Pack (Tall),” “In Defense of a Certain Type of Poetry, a Certain Type of Life, a Certain Type of Blood-Filled Creature Who Will Someday Die,” and “Upon the Mathematics of the Breath and the Way”, revealing an unexpectedly learned mind behind his seemingly offhand productions.Portions From a Wine-Stained Notebook is essential reading for Bukowski fans, as well as a good introduction for new readers of this innovative, unconventional writer.

Press Reviews

Black Sparrow Press

"Finally, after Bukowski's nearly 50 published books: novels, short stories, poetry, letters, essays, etc. David Colonne has unearthed Portions from a Wine-Stained Notebook, the previously missing link in Bukowski's oeuvre that suddenly makes everything come clear."
—John Martin

Kirkus Reviews
"More posthumous uncollected prose from the Dirty Old Man. Calonne (English/Eastern Michigan Univ.; William Saroyan: My Real Work Is Being, 1983, etc.), who previously edited a volume of Bukowski's interviews, digs up a few more fragments from the author's vast—and scattershot—oeuvre. As with many 'uncollected' selections, the results are a mixed bag, but Bukowski's gruff directness and take-no-crap attitude shine through. Discussing his style in 'Basic Training,' he writes, 'I hurled myself toward my personal god: SIMPLICITY. The tighter and smaller you got it the less chance there was of error and the lie. Genius could be the ability to say a profound thing in a simple way.' Certainly, much of Bukowski’s genius lay in his plainspoken, immediate, self-assured prose, but his constant attack on the literary establishment also earned him accolades—and scorn—from fellow writers and critics. He held special contempt for pretentious elitists, those, as Calonne eloquently notes in his illuminating introduction, 'who tried to domesticate the sacred barbaric Muse: the disruptive, primal, archaic, violent, inchoate forces of the creative unconscious.' In the more than 35 pieces that comprise the volume, Bukowski runs through all his favorite topics—drinking, fighting, women, horse-racing ('A track is some place you go so you won’t stare at the walls and whack off, or swallow ant poison')—but he’s at his most lucid and powerful when he explores the process of writing, both his own and others (Artaud, Hemingway, his hero John Fante). There’s a neat deconstruction of Ezra Pound, excerpts from his 'Notes of a Dirty Old Man' column and a peripatetic review of a Rolling Stones concert. Though a few of the selections are little more than ill-formed rants, probably originally scrawled across a bar napkin, there is plenty of the visceral, potent, even graphically sexual (tame readers beware of 'Workout') material to satisfy fans. Not for novices, but a welcome addition to Bukowski’s growing library." ( )
  CityLightsBooks | Sep 11, 2008 |
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Ce recueil de chroniques et de nouvelles inedites met en evidence la richesse et la variete de l'oeuvre de Bukowski. Ses deux premieres histoires temoignent de la double orientation stylistique qui marquera toute sa carriere de prosateur - Contrecoup d'une lettre de refus plus longue qu'a l'ordinaire (1944) trace le portrait imaginaire d'un jeune artiste epris d'ideal, un rebelle double d'un amuseur tandis que dans 20 chars de plus, et Kasseldown tombait (1946), il change de ton et donne dans la noirceur absolue. Bukowski confronte son personnage de prisonnier a une desesperante solitude spirituelle, comme s'il ecrivait lui aussi du fond du souterrain, piege dans une cellule trop petite pour un homme de sa carrure, mais qui s'en sort grace a son sens de l'humour et a son gout de l'autoderision.Dans sa derniere meditation sur l'ecriture, Les Bases, 1991, Bukowski apure les comptes et tire la lecon Plus mes phrases se rapprocheraient de la concision et du naturel, moins j'aurais de chances de me tromper et de tricher... Les mots etaient des balles, des rayons de soleil, ils n'avaient d'autre but que de contrarier le destin et mettre un terme a la damnation.

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