Wolf Larsen is an adventurer, writer, and poet who traveled through 45 countries in Latin America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
Wolf has lived in Chicago, Wisconsin, New York City, Honduras, Brazil, Peru, and India.
He worked for nearly twelve years as a seasonal laborer in Alaska. Wolf has written five novels, six collections of poetry, a play, a screenplay,
a monologue, a multimedia work, a collection of short stories, and a 70,000 word run-on sentence.
The Poem Written One Million Years After Human Extinction
I throw the city into the sky and then I throw the sky into a frying pan and the whole world eats and eats the sky while the rivers all babble human heads at you
Throw Your Sweetness into the Pan - and Cook All Your Emotions Until There's Earthquakes Re-arranging Your Head
The poem wants to be every sky that the human race has ever touched, the poem wants to be your ecstasy, I build and build the world all over the poem - I put
history into a syringe and I inject you with history and then you thrash into the music and you swim inside of a song and you become all the sunlight and
plants and animals all around you - you become atoms drifting away from each other you become millions of colliding things in this moment of sunlight and rain and tranquility
and chaos fighting all over the earth - everything is this fanatical right now - and the phrase of poetry is a baseball bat bashing imagery and poetry into your head
over and over again and the poem becomes all the eyes and emotions and thoughts of people throughout history spilling across every line of poetry and the poem
touches the human race and smiles upon their upward struggle towards progress and greatness this poem is the human race rebuilding the cities after war this poem
is the brain of the scientist bursting and colliding and erupting towards a cure for AIDS and the Poet strangles the rulers of the earth one by one and throws
their corpses unto a pile of garbage and then a stream of wonder and brilliance baths the human race in its own greatness.