Scott Wannberg

[1][2] As a poet he wrote primarily in what would be considered stream of consciousness, rarely editing any of his work until late in life.

Some of the more important influences on his work as a poet were Walt Whitman, Charles Bukowski, Philip Levine, the Beat Generation writers, and most profoundly, William Carlos Williams, as Scott was deeply committed to his own search for what might be considered the "American" idiom in language and letters.

Other titles include Strange Movie Full of Death (2009), Tomorrow is Another Song (2011) and The Official Language of Yes (2015), all published by Viggo Mortensen’s Perceval Press.

[1] Wannberg was also a member of the poetry troupe the Carma Bums, a group of traveling poets that performed primarily throughout the American Southwest and Canada until August 2009.

[9] Actor Ed Harris stated "His poetry can be political, polemical, personal, provocative, and it shies away from cheap alliteration...his work is contemporary and timeless, brave and honest, and fun as hell to read.