In Transit Authority, Tony Sanders continues his investigation of
contemporary urban metaphysical pathos. The book is made up of three
sequences that mark the early and late junctures of the twentieth
century: the first, a series of poems that investigate the early part of
the century; the second, meditations based on the 1930s photographs by
Berenice Abbott; and the third, "Reckoning," in which, with spare
lyricism, Sanders meditates on where this century has brought us. He
looks with rueful intrigue at a landscape inundated with near misses and
has-beens. While it is tempting to turn away from the common
predicament, his poems quietly urge us to keep looking. As the poet
concludes, though "things aren't what they should be according to the
map . . . we have to press on in search of our bearings."