mmm9mrpm W." W lp " 0 -W Page 2-Sunday, March 23,1980-The Michigan Daily v ,w The Michigan Daily-Sunday Free Space- poetry Books Bukowski's sentimental jot through France and Germ /ile " , '° c 1 I > I Ift t. F, z; M t ti fj ' r- ,? { 'l ~~17I I file By David Masello SHAKESPEARE NEVER DID THIS By Charles Bukowski City Lights Books $6.95, text and photos t +., r r r ,. -J ,. , ' . _ r t .. .,\ " 4, ., v : ... '._ -. x_ ( "I ( .#-..- I fi r> r ,' - I r. il er t- -A - _ _ filleI Departure Alone in my room I hear you telling me to close the door. I know it's so I won't hear you leaving. The slamming car door informs me - your perfect crime no longer perfect you must be able to see my face a pale stain on the dark window. Watching you go Ifeel nothing. Waiting behind a closed door with a noise in my head I whispered songs into the dark room, Ifeel Ifeel nothing. -Karla Hafner C HARLES BUKOWSKI is convinced that his poetry readings can cause "flash floods," "violent tornadoes," and the gathering of flocks of "hungry vultures." Fortunately it is safe to hear about those readingsthrough his latest book, Shakespeare Never Did This. In this glossy paper-bound volume, Bukowski recounts a five-day poetry- reading tour of France and Germany, where the cafe waiters, hotel cham- bermaids and subway attendants all know and love him. As a former beat poet--along the lines of Ginsberg and Burroughs-Bukowski's reputation in the States has slackened em- barrasssingly. But in Europe, unlike our own country, people from all walks of life are exposed to poetry. Bukowski, in these ramblings, is supposed to be the American writer. (The poet suspec- ts all along that he is being mistaken for Norman Mailer. But as seems his customary solution, Bukowski spends the book drinking these problems away.) The book itself does not act as poetry. In the twenty-five short sections which often verge on prose poetry, Bukowski manages to bitch about European plumbing, brag about his ability to drink, occasionally show his sexist beliefs and make the smallest, most common everyday things in life beautiful. He admits that he has no in- terests, so instead he raises the sim- plest, yet most obscure things to a sense of poetry: , How can a man who is inter- ested in almost nothing write about anything? Well, I do. I write and I write about what's left over: a stray dog walking down the street. . . the thoughts and feelings of a rapist as he bites into a hamburger sand- wich; life in the factory, life in the streets and rooms of the poor and mutilated and the insane ... In simply listing these things he has approached poetry. There is no need for more descrip- tion. TrHERE ARE times, though, when , he lets himself go in the style of a true beat poet. He doesn't worry about organization of ideas and images in a literal sense, for they are written down as they- exist inside of him-stream-of-consciousness style. While drunk one night in Germany he goes into his hotel bathroom and screams for half an hour about the mor- tality that blackbirds, watermelons, dogs, frogs, houses, whores and fish Dave Mqsello is a senior majoring in English at the University. excerptT As I got closer to the. stage the crowd began to recognize me. "Bukowski! Bukowski!" I was beginning to believe that I was Bukowski. I had to do it. As I hit the wood I felt something run through me. My fear left. I sat down, reached into the cooler and un- corked a bottle of that good German white wine. I lit a Bidi. I tasted the wine, pulled my poems and books out'of the satchel. I was calm at last. I had done it 80 times before. It was all right. I found the mike. "Hello," I said, "it's good to be back." It had taken me 54 years. A thin young German boy ran up to the stage and said, "Bukowski, you fat bastard, you swine, you dirty old man, I hate you!" That always helped relax me. It took the holiness out of poetry. There were many like the thin young German in America. I had another glass of wine and looked at him as he kept screaming at me. I had always said, when you get them to hating you then you know you are doing your job well. is able to language.] to describe experience scene--anc more poi Bukowski respects o creativity escape, a represents which only capable of: Bukowsk table. The expects to the poet ti pressionab to his birt many, whe year old g boyhood hc tHe is said a D ESPII there Shakespea fearless Bi can't conq bodied in Flinching, voke imr description cigarette i strategy thematicall the notion a all have to face. His girl friend, Linda, who accompanies him throughout the trip, is apparently used to these things and manages to get him back to sleep. It's when Bukowski's tough-guy facade sloughs away that we really like him; it's then we see his sensitivity, his perception, his ability to love. At a reading at a German university the poet admits that he usually vomits in fear before each reading. For this per- formance, however, he hasn't the time, so he's forced to empty two bottles of wine for comfort. Then, in saying good- bye to his German hosts, Bukowski says that to have such friends is to be forever pulled from the mouth of the shark and makes the, small quiet human things far more miraculous than the dead cathedrals. When you care, this (leaving) is one of the sad- dest events of life and living. He is fascinated by the eyes of a group of German boys and the film they show him about a gorilla, "Koko," who 7 ~ 9 . filer jjNSI -' - ^- -'' .--- - $dL1GZ' iL SUP ~~JL1S- Junior Karla Hafner is an occasionally rude, reckless, crude and feckless poet who is majoring in English at ....the.nier.s .. 4.. - t,.