That is on the other side of DeLongpre...
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But not everyone was thrilled to see the home landmarked. The poet's widow, Linda Lee Bukowski, said she did not think her husband would have appreciated seeing a fuss made over the house he rented.
"He was not the kind of person whose ego needed a large edifice in his memorium," she said.
Bukowski said she was sickened by earlier proposals that the house serve as a residence for writers and artists.
"That would be repulsive to Hank," she said, using the writer's nickname.
"It would be against all his natural human ways to have little writers and poets in bungalows together, little Bukowskis running around."
http://news.therecord.com/Wire/Entertainment_Wire/article/315110
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As Linda says it, "Hank" would have laughed at the "historical home" designation.
"The De Longpre address was but one of many that Hank rented and wrote in during his years in L.A. Indeed the novel `Post Office' was written there, but so many more books were written at (another) address ... After that, the rest of his work was written in San Pedro, in the home where he lived until his last precious breath, and where I still reside with nine cats."
But as has been noted, you aren't going to sell many literary tour bus tickets to San Pedro.
http://www.presstelegram.com/ci_7636769