Charles Bukowski
Charles
Bukowski American-German poet
Henry Charles
Bukowski was a German-American poet, novelist, and short story writer. His
writing was influenced by the social, cultural, and economic ambience of his
home city of Los Angeles. Wikipedia
Born: August
16, 1920, Andernach, Germany
Died: March 9,
1994, San Pedro Peninsula Hospital
Movies: Barfly,
Factotum, Charles Bukowski: Bukowski at Bellevue, MORE
Spouse: Linda
Lee Beighle (m. 1985–1994), Barbara Bukowski (m. 1955–1958)
Women Summary
Henry Chinaski
is an aging white male alcoholic who gains fame as a poet. He performs various
readings, pursues alcohol with a vengeance, and meets various people along the
way. Henry finds men largely uninteresting and chooses to focus nearly all of his
attention on women and for Henry, women equate nearly entirely with sexual
intercourse. Over the course of the novel Henry describes sexual relationships
with a variety of women in a variety of circumstances which eventually become
monotonously repetitive.
The novel
covers a period of about six years during the early 1970s. The novel's primary
setting is Los Angeles, California, with a strong focus on the filthy apartment
of Henry Chinaski, the protagonist and narrator. Henry is a fifty-year-old
alcoholic. After spending several years working as a clerk in the United States
Postal Service, Henry quits his job to pursue a full-time writing career as a
minor poet. Eking out a subsistence living by selling poems and editing little
magazines, Henry drinks and stares at women.
Eventually
Henry's publications garner some minor attention and at the commencement of the
novel's principle timeline Henry has several volumes of collected poetry in
print. He begins to give public readings and his notoriety as a drunk spreads.
He then meets Lydia Vance, a woman about half his age, and begins a prolonged
love affair with her, which endures many fights, several extra-relationship
affairs by both partners, and months of hard drinking. As Henry's fame
continues to increase, his ability to have sex with additional women becomes
manifest. Lydia's mental state degenerates and she becomes more violent and
much more jealous Finally driven over the edge by yet another of Henry's
affairs, Lydia flies into a violent rampage and is arrested. Henry declines to
press charges but their relationship is effectively terminated.
Henry then
begins a prolonged series of sexual adventures with a variety of young
attractive women. This pattern consumes the bulk of the narrative development
and varies only in the minor details. n general, Henry meets a young attractive
woman and the woman flings herself at Henry. Henry has enthusiastic sex with
her and the woman is then discarded for the next cycle. All of the women except
one are described as more beautiful than the last and more sexually perverse or
adventuresome than the last. In general, each is also younger than the last
although this is not always true. Throughout all of the affairs, Henry
continues hard drinking, constant vomiting, and an attachment that borders on
obsession to his filthy apartment.
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