The Elephant's Child: New and Selected Poems 1978-2005 offers a
generous retrospective from a poet whose passionate, straight-talking
poems have been delighting readers for forty years. Orlen writes about
what it means to be male in our time and culture, and does so with
disarming charm, honesty, directness, and humor. Like the elephant's
child in the Kipling tale, he has an insatiable curiosity about
everything: love and sex foremost, but also about the ways in which we
understand or misunderstand one another, how we perceive race, class,
and gender, how memory works, and how we struggle to make sense of our
often overwhelming and confusing world.
This is a voice we instinctively trust because of its powerful and easy
intimacy and its willingness to spill male secrets. The laughter his
poems provoke comes from recognition of our common humanity, our
passions, and blind spots.
What comes through most powerfully is a profound tenderness and
curiosity, a combination that results in heartbreaking, disturbing, and
memorable poems. The Elephant's Child will prove Orlen to be a poet
necessary to our understanding of ourselves and our culture.