this Peter the bookstore
   owner
   came around and began
   crying (yes, he actually
   shed tears):
   “Hank hurt me! he
   HURT me! I was only
   FOOLING!”
   I heard cries of dismay
   from around the
   room:
   “you’re a real bastard,
   Chinaski!”
   “Peter sells your books, he
   displays them in the
   window!”
   “Peter LOVES you!”
   “O.K.,” I said, “everybody
   out! FAST!”
   sure enough, they filed
   out
   sharing their
   anger and disgust
   with one
   another.
   and
   I locked the
   door
   then
   put out the
   lights
   got myself a
   beer
   and
   sat there
   in the dark
   drinking
   alone.
   and
   I liked that
   so
   much
   that
   that’s the way
   I continued to
   live
   from then
   on.
   there were no more
   parties
   and
   after that
   the writing got much
   better
   everything got much
   better
   because:
   you’ve got to
   get rid of
   false friends and
   bloodsuckers first
   before they
   destroy
   you.
   THE 60’S
   I don’t remember much about them
   except you’d look and some guy
   might be wearing a headdress of Indian
   feathers.
   everybody was covered with beads
   and were passing joints.
   they stretched around on comfortable rugs and
   didn’t do anything.
   I don’t know how they made the rent.
   the woman I was living with was
   always telling me, “I’m going to a
   Love-In!”
   “all right,” I’d tell her.
   she’d come back and say something
   like, “I met this BEAUTIFUL BLACK
   MAN!”
   or, “we made the cops smile!
   I gave one a FLOWER!”
   I seemed to be the only person with
   an 8-hour job.
   and there were always people
   coming through the door and raiding
   my refrigerator for food and beer.
   “WE SHARE!” the woman I lived with
   told me, “WE SHARE OUR LOVE!”
   a guy would stick his face into mine.
   drunk on my beer, he’d scream:
   “YOU OUGHTA SEE THE YELLOW
   SUBMARINE!”
   “what’s that?” I asked.
   “THE BEATLES, MAN, THE
   BEATLES!”
   I thought he meant “beetles.”
   then there was somebody called
   WAVY GRAVY.
   they even talked me into going on
   an LSD trip.
   I found it to be stupid.
   “you failed,” they told me, “you failed,
   you didn’t open up.”
   “Peace!” I said, “Peace!”
   then, I don’t know, all at once
   the 60’s seemed to be
   over.
   almost everybody vanished just like
   that.
   you’d see a few of the leftovers
   now and then
   down at Venice Beach,
   standing around on corners,
   sitting on benches
   looking really washed-out,
   with very vacant stares,
   somehow astonished
   at the turn of events.
   they slept in cars,
   stole what they could
   and demanded handouts.
   I don’t know where all the others
   went.
   I think they got suits and ties
   and went looking for
   the 8-hour job.
   the 70’s had arrived.
   and that’s when I dropped out.
   and I had the whole place
   all to
   myself.
   THE WOULD-BE HORSEPLAYER
   raining, raining, raining.
   has been for days.
   I have 9 cats, the rain drives them crazy
   and then they drive me crazy.
   last night at 3:30 one of them began
   scratching to get out.
   rain and all, he wanted out.
   I put him out.
   went back to sleep.
   then at 4 a.m. the female cat who sleeps in
   the bathroom began
   mewing.
   I sat with her for 5 minutes to calm her down,
   then went back to bed.
   at 5 a.m. one of the male cats
   began scratching.
   he had gotten into the closet, found
   a bag of cat food, knocked it over and
   was trying to claw it open.
   I picked him up and put him outside.
   I went back to bed and couldn’t sleep.
   at 8 a.m. I opened a window and a door so
   some cats could get back in and some
   could get out.
   I slept until 10 a.m. when I got up and fed
   all 9 cats.
   it was time to get ready for the racetrack,
   my daily routine.
   I stood at the window and watched the rain
   still coming down.
   it was 20 miles to the track via the freeway and
   through a dangerous area—for whites and
   maybe blacks too.
   I felt sleep deprived so I decided to go back
   to bed.
   I did, went right to sleep,
   and I dreamt.
   I dreamt I was at the racetrack.
   I was at the betting window, calling my numbers.
   it was raining hard.
   I was at the racetrack.
   I kept betting and I think I cashed some tickets
   but I never saw a horse or a jockey or a horse race.
   then I awakened.
   it was still raining.
   my wife (who is an insomniac) was
   sleeping peacefully next to me and there were
   4 cats sleeping on the bed and
   one on the floor.
   we were all sleep deprived.
   I looked at the clock: 12:30, too late to make
   the track.
   I turned on my right side, looked out the
   window.
   it was still raining, heartlessly,
   hopefully, meanly, grossly, continually,
   beautifully.
   rain, rain, rain, rain, rain, rain.
   soon I was asleep again and the world continued to do
   very well without
   me.
   THE NIGHT RICHARD NIXON SHOOK MY HAND
   I was up there on the platform,
   ready to begin when
   up walked Richard Nixon
   (or his double)
   with that familiar
   glazed smile on his face.
   he approached me, reached out and
   before I could react he
   shook my hand.
   what is he doing? I thought.
   I was about to give him a verbal
   dressing down
   but before I could do so
   he suddenly faded away
   and all I could see were the
   lights shining in my eyes and
   the audience waiting down
   there.
   m 
					     					 			y hand was shaking as
   I reached out and poured myself
   a glass of vodka from the pitcher.
   I must be giving this poetry reading
   in hell, I thought.
   it was hell: I drained the glass
   but the contents somehow had turned into
   water.
   I began to read the first poem:
   “I wandered lonely as a cloud.”
   Wordsworth!
   THROWING AWAY THE ALARM CLOCK
   my father always said, “early to bed and
   early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy
   and wise.”
   it was lights out at 8 p.m. in our house
   and we were up at dawn to the smell of
   coffee, frying bacon and scrambled
   eggs.
   my father followed this general routine
   for a lifetime and died young, broke,
   and, I think, not too
   wise.
   taking note, I rejected his advice and it
   became, for me, late to bed and late
   to rise.
   now, I’m not saying that I’ve conquered
   the world but I’ve avoided
   numberless early traffic jams, bypassed some
   common pitfalls
   and have met some strange, wonderful
   people
   one of whom
   was
   myself—someone my father
   never
   knew.
   PRETENDERS
   nothing is worse than
   a hopelessly untalented
   entertainer.
   unlike the talented
   they have boundless
   exuberance and no
   self-doubt.
   luckily, for us,
   we seldom encounter
   one of them
   except
   sometimes
   at small parties
   or as entertainers
   in
   cheap cafes.
   you don’t have to actually
   go to hell
   to know what hell must be
   like: just looking
   at
   and listening to
   one of them
   gives you a
   good
   idea.
   there seems to be
   one simple undying
   rule:
   the worse the
   talent
   the more they
   are sure
   of
   it.
   $1.25 A GALLON
   life can be vacant like the inside of
   old shoes while dogs howl in the
   rain.
   sometimes a certain anger is necessary to
   stay alive.
   I drive into the gas station
   in my ’67 Volks and
   there’s a woman parked ahead of
   me.
   I honk
   she looks back.
   I honk again
   make a motion with my hand
   for her to get out and pour some
   gas into her tin buggy. she looks
   astonished.
   it’s a cut-rate self-serve gas station
   and
   we all suffer the long lines of
   merciless doom.
   the attendant finally comes out and
   handles her
   affairs. she tells him about me:
   I am a bastard—no style, no
   decency.
   I
   look at her ass
   decide I don’t like it
   much. she looks at my face and
   decides the same. as she
   drives off I lift the
   hood
   grab the nozzle and think,
   maybe she was out to fuck me;
   I just didn’t feel in the mood
   for it.
   when the attendant walks up
   I see by his face
   that he felt the same way.
   I pay, ask him directions
   to Beverly Hills and drive off
   into the sick drooping
   pink sun.
   FLOSS-JOB
   that dental assistant in
   Burbank
   a few years
   back
   so dedicated
   cleaning my teeth
   leaning against
   me
   her large breasts
   pressed against my arm and
   shoulder
   her eyes
   looking into
   mine
   asking
   “does this
   hurt?”
   I still think about
   her golden breasts.
   she probably told
   her girlfriends about it
   later,
   laughing her ass
   off:
   “I turned-on this old
   fuck.
   Christ, it was like
   raising the
   dead.
   his old dried dick
   waving in the
   air.
   his rotting mouth
   hoping for
   one last kiss!”
   yes, dear, it hurts
   but our dumb peasant wedding
   was greater than
   you know.
   A FRIENDLY PLACE
   went into this sushi place to eat.
   sat at the counter.
   2 fellows to my left.
   one of them asked me, “what’s
   that beer you’re drinking?”
   I told him.
   he said that his beer was better,
   that he’d buy me one.
   “no thanks,” I said.
   “how about a sake?”
   “thank you very much, but no.”
   “have you ever tried
   octopus?”
   “no.”
   “here, try some of mine.”
   “yeah, try some!” said his friend.
   “thanks, but no.”
   “no, here! here! try it!”
   he put a piece on my plate.
   I picked it up and began to chew.
   it tasted like a piece of rubber.
   “you like it?”
   “it tastes like rubber.”
   there was a pause, then
   “we live on a boat,” said the nearest
   speaker.
   “in the harbor,” said the other.
   “try some sake,” said the first.
   “no, thanks.”
   “you live on a boat?” the other
   asked.
   “no.”
   “we bought you a beer anyway,” they said,
   “here it is, try it.”
   “ah, thank you.”
   I took a hit.
   “good, yes, thank you.”
   “want some more octopus?”
   “no thanks, you’re very kind.”
   “we live on a boat,” the first said.
   I continued eating.
   “you live around here?” he
   asked.
   “yes.”
   “where?”
   “in town.”
   “where in town?”
   “near first and Bandini.”
   “you know Peaches? she lives
   on Bandini.”
   “I know her, she gives loud parties.”
   “she’s married to my brother.”
   “oh, good.”
   “Peaches is a great girl!”
   “yeah.”
   “I’m going to buy you a sake.”
   “no, thanks.”
   “how come?”
   “I drink too much, I start to roll.”
   “rock and roll?”
   “no, just roll.”
   “everybody comes to the parties on our
   boat, but when
   the food and booze are
   gone, they leave.”
   “they do?”
   “yeah, then we gotta do all the clean
					     					 			 />
   up ourselves!”
   a long pause.
   I continued eating, then said,
   “well, listen, thanks for the beer,
   I’ve got to go.”
   “where you going?”
   “home.”
   “we’re having a party on the boat
   tonight …”
   “good.”
   “what’d you say your name
   was?”
   “Hank,” I said.
   “I’m Bob.”
   “I’m Eddie.”
   I walked around the counter to
   pay.
   then as I walked back to exit:
   “don’t you want one for the
   road?” Bob asked.
   “no, thanks a lot, though.”
   “see you around,” said Eddie.
   “sure,” I said.
   then I was outside.
   I walked back to my car
   thinking, well, anyhow,
   now I can tell people that I
   have eaten
   octopus.
   THE OLD COUPLE
   about ten minutes before the last race they were walking
   through the parking lot to their car, he walking in front
   by a good four feet, his head turned back toward her
   as he walked and talked.
   “why did we have to sit in that crowded section?
   I never want to sit there again! I couldn’t
   concentrated!”
   and she replied, “oh, shut up, Harry.”
   he kept walking, talking with his head turned: “I TOLD you in advance
   I wouldn’t be able to CONCENTRATE there!”
   and she said,
   “oh, go on, go on, you always make some
   EXCUSE!”
   he stopped.
   she stopped. they stared at each
   other.
   “god damn it,” he said, “YOU take the car! I’m going to
   take a taxi!”
   and she said,
   “now, don’t do anything FOOLISH, don’t be
   STUPID!”
   then they started walking again with the same four feet
   of space between them.
   in the distance
   the call to post sounded for the last
   race.
   “who’d you bet in the
   9th?” she asked.
   he replied, “that’s MY own
   god-damned
   business!”
   then I started the engine of my
   car and could hear
   no more.
   WHAT?
   I was already old and hadn’t made it
   as a writer
   when a young man sitting on my couch
   asked me,
   “what do you think of Huxley living up
   in the Hollywood hills while you live down
   here?”
   “I don’t think anything about it,”
   I told him.
   “what do you mean?” he asked.
   “I mean, I don’t think it has anything
   to do with anything.”
   now the young man who asked me
   that question lives up in the hills
   and I still live down here
   and I still don’t think it has anything
   to do with