Play the Piano Drunk Like a Percussion Instrument until the Fingers Begin to Bleed a Bit

by Charles Bukowski

Paperback, 2002

Status

Available

Call number

PS3552.U4 P58

Publication

Ecco (2002), 128 pages

Description

Play the Piano introduces Charles Bukowski's poetry from the 1970s. He leads a life full of gambling and booze but also finds love. These poems are full of lechery and romance as he struggles to mature.

User reviews

LibraryThing member poetontheone
The best poems in this collection reverberate with the atmosphere of a blue collar Zen Koan written waist deep into a case of beer, but even the best here on not on par with the best poems in other Bukowski collections. There are quite a few poems that fall flat. When considering Bukowski's output
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in the seventies, Love is a Dog from Hell is the better collection by a considerable amount, if you have to choose.
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LibraryThing member Salmondaze
I'm just phoning it in at this point as far as the Buk goes. Writing reviews for all the books I've read is turning out to be a little tough. This book is pretty short as far as his collections of poetry go and there are perhaps overall less zingers than his last reviewed book on here even if the
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quality is still very high, but a huge mention has to go out there to "Fire Station" which is most likely Bukowski's single most transcendent moment in poetry. It's a highlight by a man who has had a great number of poems read by yours truly.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1979

Physical description

128 p.; 5.88 inches

ISBN

0876854374 / 9780876854372
Page: 0.092 seconds