Post Office: A Novel
by Charles Bukowski
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Read in May, 2007
recommends it for:
everyone (except girls)
What do you get when you mix two cases of beer, chronic gambling, and a vulgar, "Fuck this world and fuck you if you live in it" attitude?
Probably not a very nice person. But after reading "Post Office", my first by Bukowski, you start to realize that there are too many fucking pussy ass nice people in the world. I wish sometimes that I could live ten minutes of my life the way Henry Chininski wakes up every morning. Maybe then my balls might drop just an inch or two and ...more
Probably not a very nice person. But after reading "Post Office", my first by Bukowski, you start to realize that there are too many fucking pussy ass nice people in the world. I wish sometimes that I could live ten minutes of my life the way Henry Chininski wakes up every morning. Maybe then my balls might drop just an inch or two and ...more
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Read in November, 2007
is it just me, or does reading bukowski make you want to listen to tom waits, too? finished post office last night and this morning listened to small change on the train. here are the opening lyrics to I Can't Wait to Get Off Work (And See My Baby on Montgomery Avenue):
I don't mind working, 'cause I used to be jerking off most of my time in bars,
I've been a cabbie and a stock clerk and a soda-fountain jock-jerk
And a manic mechanic on cars.
It's nice work if you can get it, now who the...more
I don't mind working, 'cause I used to be jerking off most of my time in bars,
I've been a cabbie and a stock clerk and a soda-fountain jock-jerk
And a manic mechanic on cars.
It's nice work if you can get it, now who the...more
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone who wants to read something important.
This is my second book by Bukowski (Ham on Rye was my first), and it was a great read. Chinaski's social life is a hoot, and his desire to just be plain lazy and his utter lack of ambition give me hope for my own life. After eleven mind numbing years of college, it's not hard to draw parallels between my own life and Chinaski's (I'm just glad I quit drinking way before I became a raging alcoholic). Bukowski shows what you do to survive and how just trying to survive can be just as bad as bein...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
world-weary retro-hipsters
Charles Bukowski was quite a character - "The Poet of Skid Row", revered in Europe (perhaps confirming some romantic gritty view of the US?) I'd watched a documentary about him and Factotum which is based on one of his novels, so it was time to...more
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Bukowksi is a brilliant minimalist (or just a more candid Hemmingway).
Literature is full of brilliant drunks who wax on in purple prose about why they drink, why the world makes them drink, etc.
Bukowski cuts through all this sentimentalism and reveals the world of the drunk through his still inebriated eyes, not the whimsical or weepy sober memories. It's a world where "shit happens," you rely on instinct and even though you're in a fog it feels all the more real.
It's fun ...more
Literature is full of brilliant drunks who wax on in purple prose about why they drink, why the world makes them drink, etc.
Bukowski cuts through all this sentimentalism and reveals the world of the drunk through his still inebriated eyes, not the whimsical or weepy sober memories. It's a world where "shit happens," you rely on instinct and even though you're in a fog it feels all the more real.
It's fun ...more
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bookshelves:
biographical,
fiction
Read in August, 2007
How very alone everyone is in this book.
In sad defence they intimidate, lie, drink, get violent and screw.
I once read of an area of Africa where all the elephants had been poached. Hundreds of miles away they had a problem with too many elephants, so they rounded up 10 or so young ones (easy to transport) and transplanted them.
Well, those young elephants had no society to teach them how to behave, no elephant mums, dads, aunties or grannies. They acted just like human teenage delinquents; ...more
In sad defence they intimidate, lie, drink, get violent and screw.
I once read of an area of Africa where all the elephants had been poached. Hundreds of miles away they had a problem with too many elephants, so they rounded up 10 or so young ones (easy to transport) and transplanted them.
Well, those young elephants had no society to teach them how to behave, no elephant mums, dads, aunties or grannies. They acted just like human teenage delinquents; ...more
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Read in October, 2007
Bukowski does a number on the post office. Seems like an insane institution, and yet he stuck with them for twelve years.
Favorite scenes: Spending Christmas with an old girlfriend, they are drinking and he falls asleep near the Christmas tree. Then, "Something awakened me. I opened my eyes. Just in time to see the huge tree covered with hot lights, lean slowly toward me, the pointed star coming down like a dagger. I didn't quite know what it was. It looked like the end of the world.&qu...more
Favorite scenes: Spending Christmas with an old girlfriend, they are drinking and he falls asleep near the Christmas tree. Then, "Something awakened me. I opened my eyes. Just in time to see the huge tree covered with hot lights, lean slowly toward me, the pointed star coming down like a dagger. I didn't quite know what it was. It looked like the end of the world.&qu...more
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My first affair with Bukowski. I found this book while substitute teaching a group of tranquil 12th graders. I picked up the book, began reading, and couldn't believe that this book was allowed in a classroom.
Luckily the students had no interest whatsoever in the book. Although I found many parallels between Bukowski and hyphy bay area culture (the humor and objectification of women being 2 of them), I could see how the students wouldn't relate.
The book is hilarious. I read it in an...more
Luckily the students had no interest whatsoever in the book. Although I found many parallels between Bukowski and hyphy bay area culture (the humor and objectification of women being 2 of them), I could see how the students wouldn't relate.
The book is hilarious. I read it in an...more
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What a great novel. The first Bukowski book I read, this will truly draw you in to his work and to the recurring character Hank Chinaski-a drunk with a temper who treats women terribly. But the book is hilarious and the "I hate my job" aspect as seen through Chinaski's work at the post office is really one of the best office-y books I have ever read (maybe a tie with the fantastic office scenes with Frank Wheeler in Revolutionary Road).
Here's the books dedication: "This book i...more
Here's the books dedication: "This book i...more
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Read in January, 2007
I do think it's important to give your signifigant others books by your favorite author because it colors their perspective of who you really are. I don't necessarily think that Christmas time is the time for giving them, particularly when you yourself have not read the book, and have no idea of whether or not said signifigant other will enjoy it...chances are they'll feel like they got a bowling ball with Homer engraved on it.
This book is my bowling ball, but once the initial flabbergast...more
This book is my bowling ball, but once the initial flabbergast...more
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bookshelves:
fiction
This was my first experience with Bukowski, and it will definetly not be my last!
I read this book in one day, cover to cover. I was drawn to it first by the title. I had not yet come across a novel written about a post office worker before, and thought I would read it for kicks (my grandfather, father, uncle and brother are all Post Office employees....)
Once I cracked the open the first chapter tho, I knew that this was going to be a great book. Bukowski is full of wit and grit, his use ...more
I read this book in one day, cover to cover. I was drawn to it first by the title. I had not yet come across a novel written about a post office worker before, and thought I would read it for kicks (my grandfather, father, uncle and brother are all Post Office employees....)
Once I cracked the open the first chapter tho, I knew that this was going to be a great book. Bukowski is full of wit and grit, his use ...more
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bookshelves:
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Read in February, 2008
I don’t know if it’s exactly a fetish, but I’ve long had thing for postal workers. It started eons ago when I developed a crush on the Postmaster back in Prior Lake. When I moved, I changed post offices and developed a crush on Mary. At least I think her name is Mary. We shall call her Mary. Mary always says things like “oh, I’ve got some intelligent conversation coming up” when she sees me standing in line. It cracks me up, but I’m not the person she’s currently helping who is a...more
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Read in May, 2007
recommends it for:
failed alcoholics, middling authors
Read this at the back end of a personal Bukowski burst. Re-reading the mostly brilliant Women and the revealing childhood memoir Ham on Rye had me fired up; Bukowski's effortless prose and endearing humanity makes for super quick and enjoyable reading. Has there been a more lovable drug-abusing, womanizing drunkard in the history of 20th Century fiction?
I believe Post Office was his first novel, and it shows. The writing is more compact and hits less hard. The tales are amusing but not...more
I believe Post Office was his first novel, and it shows. The writing is more compact and hits less hard. The tales are amusing but not...more
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recommends it for:
knuckle-heads, ne'er-do-wells
Bukowski was once an idol of mine. I've since grown up. He took himself too seriously (while pretending that he didn't). And he was practically talentless. He had spunk and a surprising ("surprising" because of all the booze) work ethic but an ultimately boring sense of humor. His words are like what Hemingway would have thrown away. Bukowski was America's greatest one-trick pony. Or perhaps that's giving him too much credit. He might have had only half a trick, like that uncle of ours...more
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Read in May, 2008
Bukowski can be a breath of fresh air, and Post Office reminds me that the best writing results for allowing an individual voice to flow. Often people try to emulate Bukowski in the way they try to emulate someone like Raymond Carver. But it can't necessarily be done.
Post Office tells the story of the 12 years he worked for the goverment delivering mail, and it's told with wit and humor, and a touch of the sadness in life. The language is simple and sparse, but effective. And it's a quick r...more
Post Office tells the story of the 12 years he worked for the goverment delivering mail, and it's told with wit and humor, and a touch of the sadness in life. The language is simple and sparse, but effective. And it's a quick r...more
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bookshelves:
works-of-great-importance
Read in October, 2006
recommends it for:
the working class heroes, zeroes, and wal-mart greeters
I had three copies of "Post Office" to choose from when I went to the ol' Boston Public Library. I chose the less soiled one with what looked like a coffee cup ring (or diaphram imprint). The condition of this book mirrored the content, and both were charming and spot on. "Post Office" focuses on Hank's discontent while dealing with his ladies, getting his drink on, learning the zones with a computer like memory, and pissing off countless bosses while gambling at the track. T...more
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Read in August, 2007
This book is the introduction of his famous autobiographical character, Henry Chinaski. Although this is a novel, it is thought to be based on Bukowski's years as a postal worker. Henry keeps screwing up his life by drinking too much, taking drugs, and getting involved with destructive women. Somehow Chinaski survives all the shit, hanging on by a pubic hair.
I was disgusted with him throughout the whole story, but the simple flow of the narrative, told through the eyes of Chinaski, was so fun ...more
I was disgusted with him throughout the whole story, but the simple flow of the narrative, told through the eyes of Chinaski, was so fun ...more
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Read in March, 2008
I read this because every time my someone found out that I used to work at the Post Office, they would tell me to read this book. So I did. Not that impressed. I kept going through it to find out what would happen, but not much did. Just a lot of working, drinking, and highly implausible sexual encounters. Maybe because this was written back in the 60's by a woman-hating alcoholic, that's why Henry Chinaski is able to lay every woman he comes across. The tedium of the job is there, but it's a l...more
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Read in January, 2005
This is the first Bukowski novel I read, and I was instantly hooked. While I'd have to say that Factotum is his best novel page for page, this one takes a close second. It's like Office Space for the drunken, grizzled, lazy blue collar set, with the comedy coming in the form of Hank Chinaski's bitter, hung-over, venemous rants against a system that seems designed to wear men down until they're just cogs turning wheels. One feels a bit gritty after a Bukowski novel, but also strangely empowere...more
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Read in March, 2008
I opened this book having never read Charles Bukowski. My friend suggested him and described his writing as intoxicating. While it may be ironic that an author who glorifies alcoholism be described as intoxicating and must agree with my friend. Bukowski has the ability to make the mundane compelling. In this book, his first major success I believe, he recounts semi-fictional episodes from his years working at the US Post Office. Afte...more
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