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Tales of Ordinary Madness

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Tales of Ordinary Madness
by: Charles Bukowski

 : Tales of Ordinary Madness

List Price: £8.99
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Binding: Paperback
EAN: 9780753513873
ISBN: 0753513870
Label: Virgin Books
Manufacturer: Virgin Books
Number Of Pages: 240
Publication Date: February 07, 2008
Publisher: Virgin Books
Studio: Virgin Books




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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Bukowski = my favourite writer
Charles Bukowski is my favourite writer but here in this collection of short stories he seems to have lost the plot. I may run contrary to the other reviewers here, but I really didn't like Tales of Ordinary Madness. The book, first of all, doesn't even read like a Bukowski book. The writing style is totally different from any of the novels (all excellent) or short story books, especially Hot Water Music and South of No North.

Bukowski apparently wrote these stories for an American magazine when he was famous. The stories are terrible. They don't make any sense. Things happen in the book and you're not sure what's going on. The plots have no sort of logical flow to them and are pointless drivel. Completely disjointed - and not the stories to each other, but within each story. How in the world did collection of stories ever get to be published?

The book is explicit in its content, and for those that find subjects about filthy drunks, gambling, boozing, offensive sexual details, and nonstandard behaviour, do not read this book. The stories are obviously autobiographical since every Bukowski fan knows he was a drunk and lived in filthy transient hotels for most of his life. His auto-fiction stories are crude and unsavory.

Tales of Ordinary Madness is not a good book; it is full of poetry and short stories about people that were erratic, and rejected by society because of the way they lived. Is it because these characters were mad, or is it because that was their natural course in life? Well, that has to be interpreted by the reader. Through his writing he allows you to get into the subhuman scenario of the people that he chose to surround himself with, you can feel it. Bukowski made it clear through his prose that he was a non-believer of what society dictated he was a radical. Bukowski was a great writer, however he did contradict himself by professing to hate poets although he was one himself. He never wanted to fit into any role in society although he ended-up doing so.





Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - the best collection
I have read (as far as I know) all of Bukowski's stuff. I love a few of the poems but a lot of them drift over me. It is with the stories that he has won me over. All the novels (especially Post Office and Ham on Rye) are wonderful, but his writing is best suited to short stories (and I would say the novels Factotum and Women, great as they are, are basically a novelised series of short stories...) The best collections of short stories are The Most Beautiful Woman In Town and this one, with this one the more consistent. There are examples of the short story in this book that I firmly believe could not be bettered, enough to make you put the book down for a minute, just to think about what you've read, and just marvel at the sheer word-economical perfection, and how his incredible turn of phrase can sum up inner thoughts and philosophies with a paucity of words. As long as you're not easily offended, there is plenty here to blow you away.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Anything but Ordinary
In TALES OF ORDINARY MADNESS Charles Bukowski does what very few can. He finds the poetry in real people who live miserable lives in miserable conditions, mostly by their own doing. There is very little to recommend in these characters. Like Bukowski, most of them are unemployed drunks, dirty old men, sexual degenerates, and morally stripped souls. They form a subculture that perpetuates and sustains itself as long as the liquor keeps flowing (and it does), the women keep giving (and they do ... and do), and the men continue indulging (and they do ... and do ... and do). And yet, the reader is transfixed. For better or worse (usually worse), the reader chooses to enter Bukowski's world, takes a perverse delight in the goings-on, lingers and tarries, knowing that he or she can escape from the pits of hell at will, revisiting when the urge strikes. Better yet, there is no hangover in the morning. TALES OF ORDINARY MADNESS is a collection of short stories, united by themes of desperation, loneliness, dead-end jobs, sexual perversion, and a need for real connection in an alienated, disturbed world. In these stories there is truly something of the profane and sacred, irreverent and holy, indifferent and feeling. The stories stay with one long after the reading is over. Bukowski's writing style is as nonconforming as his person. He doesn't always adhere to the rules of syntax, but this only serves to visibly, or tangibly, underscore the more abstract originality of the stories and situations themselves. Bukowski isn't for everyone. The writing is fierce, sexually explicit, unforgiving, and yet so totally true to the characters and their lives that it never seems overdone, affected, false. Through his words, Bukowski manages to transform the ordinary into something great.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - rip-roaring madness
The moment where our hero Hank meet's the zen master is a rich delicacy to be taken only on a belly full of hard drink good god this is one of the funniest chapters ever written by man or beast hats off to the german swine charles bukowski for making me roar and bawl like a beaten child .



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Simple, but...
I read the tales, and I just Love them, Easy and Deep at the same time. "Appunti sulla Peste" one of the best, "Violenza Carnale" I Also see the short movie, just probably True. I feel...one More Beer.




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