Written in first-person, Women by Charles Bukowski starts off
interest, but soon you realise that that the protagonist's life
consists of two main things: drinking and women. After that, it is
noticeable that the entire novel is based on those two things. The
beginning is interesting, but about more than two-thirds of the
novel is uninteresting, and I was hoping that the story would end.
If you have read Post Office before reading Women, then you will
not find the humour greatly amusing. You will find the protagonist
unchanging, and the story repetitive because of the many women that
the protagonist deals with.
The protagonist, Henry Chinaski, a recluse, drinks all day long and
somehow or another, even though he is his fifties, he ends up with
a lot of women, most of which admire his writing. Henry has a
problem, however, that he cannot settle for just one woman. Thus,
you will notice that there are many different women involved
throughout the novel, some of which make one appearance, while
others make a few. Henry cannot stay sober, so he drinks all day
long. He cannot stay faithful to one woman at a time, so he sleeps
with many different women, and causes himself problems.
Women is written as though it was an autobiography, which I believe
it is. The protagonist, Henry Chinaski, was born in 1920 and is
German, which is the same as the author. Henry used to work at the
post office, and now is a writer of poetry, novels, and short
stories, which is exactly what the author did. Of course, when you
are reading such works that are based on real life, you should not
expect a proper plot or very much character development. There is
just a trace of some development in Henry on the last few pages.
All in all, I recommend reading either Post Office or Women, but
not both. I greatly enjoyed Post Office better, and it was shorter
too.
2/5