Vincent O'Sullivan (poet)

Vincent Gerard O’Sullivan (28 September 1937 Auckland, New Zealand – ) is New Zealand poet, short story writer, novelist, playwright, critic and editor.[1]

He graduated from the University of Auckland and Oxford University; he lectured at Victoria University of Wellington (1963–66) and the University of Waikato (1968–78).

He served as editor of the NZ Listener (1979–80).[2]

Contents

Awards

Works

Poetry

Short Stories

Novels

Plays

Anthologies

Editor

Reviews

In print and in performance, Vincent O’Sullivan as poet reminds one of nothing so much as an antipodean Marist or Jesuit; with his trenchant mix of philosophical erudition and vernacular ease, he comes across as the defrocked priest of New Zealand literature. His poems display an irreverence that shades into reverence: God is spoken of with fondness and slight regret, as if O’Sullivan is remembering a character who belongs to a previous book (which, he might say, is what God is).[3]

This poem is in many ways typical of O'Sullivan's strengths: it has a lyric eloquence that never shies away from, often embraces, difficult sometimes philosophical subject matter and is a good introduction – as is the volume as a whole – to his work in general.[4]

References

External links