The Euphio Question by Kurt Vonnegut

The Euphio Question by Kurt Vonnegut. A short story from “The Monkey House”, (1968) LADIES AND GENTLEMEN of the Federal Communications Commission, I appreciate this opportunity to testify on the subject before you. I’m sorry—or maybe “heartsick” is the word—that news has leaked out about it. But now that word is getting around and coming…

An Evil Town by Charles Bukowski

An Evil Town (The Movie)

We normally don’t post videos, but when it comes to Buk, we make an exception. Released in 1995 and directed by Richard Sears, An Evil Town was a big winner both at Cannes and the New York Underground Film Festival. The short film is based on the story of the same name by Charles Bukowski.…

YOU AND YOUR BEER AND HOW GREAT YOU ARE by Charles Bukowski

A Radio With Guts by Charles Bukowski

A Radio With Guts is one of Bukowski’s best and most obscure poems … it was on the 2nd floor on Coronado Street I used to get drunk and throw the radio through the window while it was playing, and, of course, it would break the glass in the window and the radio would sit…

Keep on Truckin

Charles Bukowski by Robert Crumb

It just seems fitting that Robert Crumb and Charles Bukowski would find themselves working together at some point. In the 1980s, they joined forces in the two Bukowski books, Bring Me Your Love and There’s No Business. Crumbs most famous works include his Keep On Truckin’ strip, and strips featuring characters such as the bohemian…

Oscar “Zeta” Acosta, a.k.a. Dr. Gonzo

Ever hear of Oscar “Zeta” Acosta? Maybe you know him better as Dr. Gonzo in Hunter S. Thompson’s 1971 book, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. In life, Acosta was a Mexican-American attorney, author and activist in the Chicano Movement in Southern California. Acosta wrote somewhat semi-autobiographical novels about himself, as well as appearing with…

The Truth About Sancho Panza by Franz Kafka

The Truth About Sancho Panza by Franz Kafka

Talk about your SHORT stories! The Truth About Sancho Panza by Franz Kafka was first published in 1931, seven years after the author’s death. While classified by some as a short story, it is in fact what is known as a parable. In Spanish, a Sancho is a sidekick, while Panza refers to a man’s…