#AmericanWriters #1993 #ThePleasuresOfTheDamned
this guy he’s got a crazy eye and he’s brown a dark brown from the sun the Hollywood and Western sun
I awaken about noon and go out to… in my old torn bathrobe. I’m hung over hair down in my eyes barefoot
After dinner or lunch or whatever it was—with my crazy 12 hour night I was no longer sure what was what—I said, "Look, baby, I’m sorry, but don’t you realize that this job is driving me...
oh, how worried they are about my soul! I get letters the phone rings... “are you going to be all right?”
to be writing poetry at the age of… like a schoolboy, surely, I must be crazy; racetracks and booze and arguments with the landlord;
I don’t beat the walls with my fis… I just sit but it rushes in a tide of it. the woman in the court behind me h…
my daughter is most glorious. we are eating a takeout snack in my car in Santa Monica.
they photograph you on your porch and on your couch and standing in the courtyard or leaning against your car these photographers
all the women all their kisses the different ways they love and talk and need. their ears they all have
listening to Wagner as outside in the dark the wind bl… trees wave and shake lights go off and on the walls creak and the… bed...
It was 3 or 4 days before I had to fly to Houston to give a reading. I went to the track, drank at the track, and afterwards I went to a bar on Hollywood Boulevard. I went home at 9 or ...
you gotta have wars suppose World War One was the bes… really, you know, both sides were… they really had something to fight… they really thought they had somet…
a woman, a tire that’s flat, a disease, a desire: fears in front of you, fears that hold so still
they’d come around and they’d ask “you finished your 2nd novel yet?” “no.”
The rainy season began. Most of the money went for drink so my shoes had holes in the soles and my raincoat was torn and old. In any steady downpour I got quite wet, and I mean wet-down...