About the Author:
Arthur Vogelsang is the author of six previous books of poetry, including Twentieth Century Women selected by John Ashbery for the Contemporary Poetry Series, and Cities and Towns, which received the Juniper Prize. His work has been included in numerous anthologies such as The Best American Poetry, The Pushcart Prize, The New Breadloaf Anthology of Contemporary Poetry, and American Hybrid. Vogelsang was coeditor of the Norton anthology The Body Electric: America’s Best Poetry from The American Poetry Review, with an introduction by Harold Bloom. He is the recipient of a California Arts Council fellowship and three National Endowment for the Arts fellowships in poetry.
Review:
“There’s only one Arthur Vogelsang. A seriously playful absurdist, he deflates false authority while underscoring the barbarism of history. In his rangy diction, he underscores our frailties and our incomprehensible and finite existence. In Orbit Vogelsang brings us closer to the tragic comedy of human experience.”
--Ira Sadoff
“Part vaudevillian, part shaman, Arthur Vogelsang celebrates the tenacious hopes of the hopeless and repeats aloud the snarling prayers of the lost. Voice-driven and maximal, each its own tonal high-wire act, Arthur Vogelsang’s poems sear the imagination while either touching or ripping out the reader’s heart.”
--David St. John
“Arthur Vogelsang's new collection, Orbit, reminds me of James Joyce's description of the vehement anecdote that is poetry, where speech finds speech in a human continuity that is essential to all literature, but especially to the great wisdom literatures. This is such a surprising and wonderful book.”
--Norman Dubie
"Throughout this collection, Vogelsang navigates delicate balances . . . the majority of the pieces successfully enroll the reader: these poems intrigue much as alien landscapes do; they tempt with the spectacle of alternate worlds; they present linguistic and aesthetic iterations that are compelling for both their tautological nature and playful avoidance of conventional expectations, lines that evoke possibilities beyond the egoic narratives around which most lives unwaveringly resolve."
—Colorado Review
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