
Psychedelic Norway
Poetry by John Colburn
October 1, 2013 âą 6 x 9 âą 182 pages âą 978-1-56689-335-0
An exploration of folklore, visionary states, surrealism, hybrid forms, and the political implications of their confluence.
Psychedelic Norway takes form as site of play and a place for the rupture of expectations. Sentence, folktale, confession, pop quizâall allow for the chaotic impulse behind the imagination, defying the tyranny of orthodoxies with a visionary midwestern populism that argues for enchantment as the moral imperative of our time.
About the Author
John Colburn lives in Northeast Minneapolis. Heâs an editor and co-publisher at Spout Press and the author of Invisible Daughter and Psychedelic Norway (Coffee House Press), as well as two poetry chapbooks, Kissing and The Lawrence Welk Diaries. He has taught at Hamline University and Perpich Center for Arts Education. He is also a member of the improvised music collective Astronaut Cooperâs Parade.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please call (612) 338-0125 or email us at [email protected].
Reviews
Â
âJohn Colburnâs Psychadelic Norway shows off the style of anarchic poetry at its best. [A]n admirable collection and one that deserves a great amount of praise for its poise and creativity.â âSacramento Book Review
âSuch a joy to read. . . . Psychedelic Norway is a feast for the eyes, ears and intellectâspecifically, it is an abundant feast.â âGalatea Resurrects
âThe poems in [this] collection are surreal as the title suggests, dipping in and out of the present, reading thoughts of inanimate objects and waxing philosophical between grotesque visions. Chaotic and vibrant, itâs playful on the surface and illuminating to those who spend more time with it.â âSecrets of the City
âJohn Colburnâs Psychedelic Norway is a little like hearing John Coltraneâs âsheets of soundâ for the first time. Itâs all in there, the past, the present, the hoped for future and the sense of loss. . . . The experience of reading these poems is something like weightlessness. . . . Worth full price of admission and then some.â âMichael Dennis
âJohn Colburn does here for poetry what George Saunders has done for the short story: liberate it to pursue darkly funny social commentary through wildly inventive combinations of form and tone. Part folktale; part Fluxus happening: is this book mocking us? Celebrating us? The answer is yes. The answer to nearly any question you can ask this book, in fact, is yes. Colburn writes, âAre you Dobby Gibson, so am I.â Itâs unlikely youâll see yourself in these pages in quite the same way I do, but itâs even more unlikely youâll see yourselfâor the world around youâthe same way again. Our Golden Age begins.â âDobby Gibson
âPlain, simple: open this book to page 149. When I heard John Colburn recite the poem on that page, he made me believe in poetry again, all over. It is a list, it is creation, it is the apocalypse, it has jokes, it talks about people someone loves or doesnât love, or know. The pluralityâthe every all of itâforgets itself breathless for a momentââand they built a word for us / they called us the futureââJohn Colburn has brought us there, and you can have it. Thank god for this book.â âAmanda Nadelberg
âRead John Colburnâs poetry and feel him lay bandages upon the earth. . . . Colburn builds a kaleidoscopic palace for the reader to navigate: fractured, crystalline, and trembling with light. . . . Psychedelic Norway holds countless questions and limitless magic.â âThe L Magazine
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Description
Poetry by John Colburn
October 1, 2013 âą 6 x 9 âą 182 pages âą 978-1-56689-335-0
An exploration of folklore, visionary states, surrealism, hybrid forms, and the political implications of their confluence.
Psychedelic Norway takes form as site of play and a place for the rupture of expectations. Sentence, folktale, confession, pop quizâall allow for the chaotic impulse behind the imagination, defying the tyranny of orthodoxies with a visionary midwestern populism that argues for enchantment as the moral imperative of our time.
About the Author
John Colburn lives in Northeast Minneapolis. Heâs an editor and co-publisher at Spout Press and the author of Invisible Daughter and Psychedelic Norway (Coffee House Press), as well as two poetry chapbooks, Kissing and The Lawrence Welk Diaries. He has taught at Hamline University and Perpich Center for Arts Education. He is also a member of the improvised music collective Astronaut Cooperâs Parade.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please call (612) 338-0125 or email us at [email protected].
Reviews
Â
âJohn Colburnâs Psychadelic Norway shows off the style of anarchic poetry at its best. [A]n admirable collection and one that deserves a great amount of praise for its poise and creativity.â âSacramento Book Review
âSuch a joy to read. . . . Psychedelic Norway is a feast for the eyes, ears and intellectâspecifically, it is an abundant feast.â âGalatea Resurrects
âThe poems in [this] collection are surreal as the title suggests, dipping in and out of the present, reading thoughts of inanimate objects and waxing philosophical between grotesque visions. Chaotic and vibrant, itâs playful on the surface and illuminating to those who spend more time with it.â âSecrets of the City
âJohn Colburnâs Psychedelic Norway is a little like hearing John Coltraneâs âsheets of soundâ for the first time. Itâs all in there, the past, the present, the hoped for future and the sense of loss. . . . The experience of reading these poems is something like weightlessness. . . . Worth full price of admission and then some.â âMichael Dennis
âJohn Colburn does here for poetry what George Saunders has done for the short story: liberate it to pursue darkly funny social commentary through wildly inventive combinations of form and tone. Part folktale; part Fluxus happening: is this book mocking us? Celebrating us? The answer is yes. The answer to nearly any question you can ask this book, in fact, is yes. Colburn writes, âAre you Dobby Gibson, so am I.â Itâs unlikely youâll see yourself in these pages in quite the same way I do, but itâs even more unlikely youâll see yourselfâor the world around youâthe same way again. Our Golden Age begins.â âDobby Gibson
âPlain, simple: open this book to page 149. When I heard John Colburn recite the poem on that page, he made me believe in poetry again, all over. It is a list, it is creation, it is the apocalypse, it has jokes, it talks about people someone loves or doesnât love, or know. The pluralityâthe every all of itâforgets itself breathless for a momentââand they built a word for us / they called us the futureââJohn Colburn has brought us there, and you can have it. Thank god for this book.â âAmanda Nadelberg
âRead John Colburnâs poetry and feel him lay bandages upon the earth. . . . Colburn builds a kaleidoscopic palace for the reader to navigate: fractured, crystalline, and trembling with light. . . . Psychedelic Norway holds countless questions and limitless magic.â âThe L Magazine











