Charles Bukowski has always sat uneasily amongst the
cannon of modern American writers. To some he is an original and
perceptive writer on the nihilism and futility of
modern, capitalist
society; a man who brings a keen poetic eye to the loneliness and
desperation of the modern, American sub-culture. To others, he is a man
of little talent who squanders what talent there is on a glorification
of misogyny, violence and alcoholism. Whichever view holds more truth,
Bukowski is a writer where you need to make up your mind and you will
probably recognise which view you subscribe to within half-an-hour of
picking up one of his books. In choosing to read Bukowski, I would
recommend that it is the poetry upon which you base your decision;
despite the fact that he is, perhaps, better known for his prose -
particularly the novel Factotum, made into a film starring Mickey
O?Rourke. Burning in Water, Drowning in Flame is an excellent book for
those unfamiliar with Bukowski?s poetry. The poems in this volume are
collected from various works, spanning the years 1955 - 1973. The
beauty in Bukowski?s poem lies in their apparent simplicity. The simple
language, the short lines, even the font and printing style combine to
make the reader feel that a lonely drunk has sat down and typed out his
pain in a few unreflective moments. However, behind this apparent ease
of composition lies a power and poetic sensibility that ensures the
poems, their words and symbols stay in the mind for a long, long time
after their reading. Bukowski?s poems are ones that, if they hook you,
you will turn to and read again and again. A poem such as machineguns,
towers & timeclocks tell of a man setting off for work. The sheer
sense of futility and alienation of the reader scream at the reader
through the easy, understated language. Whilst a poem such as sway with
me is a simple cry for love, the humorous structure and bathos of they,
all of them, know gives a different perspective on loneliness and
alienation. Poets like Bukowski, who divide opinion so sharply, are
always worth reading but for those who regard the most beautiful and
powerful poetry as that which conveys the most intense emotion in the
simplest language, this writer is sure to appeal.