- Copywork365
- Posts
- 26(ish)-APR-2024 | Excerpt from “Women” by Charles Bukowski
26(ish)-APR-2024 | Excerpt from “Women” by Charles Bukowski
Excerpt from “Women” by Charles Bukowski
I'm not sure when I first saw Lydia Vance. It was about 6 years ago and I had just quit a twelve year job as a postal clerk and was trying to be a writer. I was terrified and drank more than ever. I was attempting my first novel. I drank a pint of whiskey and two six packs of beer each night while writing. I smoked cheap cigars and typed and drank and listened to classical music on the radio until dawn. I set a goal of ten pages a night but I never knew until the next day how many pages I had written. I'd get up in the morning, vomit, then walk to the front room and look on the couch to see how many pages were there. I always exceeded my ten. Sometimes there were 17, 18, 23, 25 pages. Of course, the work of each night had to be cleaned up or thrown away. It took me twenty-one nights to write my first novel.
Bukowski and his work are massively polarizing.
Some (including “Women”) is featured in r/menwritingwomen — and rightfully so. There’s an ugly side to it. Much of the main character’s behavior is autobiographical, and it’s outdated to say the least, especially with regard to sexual equality and consent. It’s very difficult to not apply auteur theory here.
So deriving value from Bukowski requires us to use the proverbial mirror to look at Medusa. I’m taking a critical eye to each excerpt on an individual basis and looking at it in isolation, in its own little vacuum of sorts.
But if we focus on the good pieces, I do believe there is a lot to be gained from studying his writing. His style is raw and visceral.
I just wanted to be transparent with you.