Praise for
Or: An Autobiography
‘Haunted thick and variously’, Or: An Autobiography stages a non-binary, verbicovisual encounter with Virginia Woolf’s modernist ‘biography’, Orlando and its kin, in the form of a collaged and shaped assemblage, a ghostly bag of ‘queer tricks’. Arranged in chapters with bifurcated pages, Or makes its own place in the tide of ‘documents, both private and historical’, as Woolf had it, with fluency, invention, candour and verve. Experimental sonnet sequence above, auto-biblio-biographical essay below, each a fragmentary, bookish constellation of green, gender, sex, submission, love, wind, water, flowers, trees and centaurs, complete with addended textual apparatus. Or takes Toby Fitch’s evolving work in visual and citational poetics in a new direction that is self-reflexive, scholarly, intimate and touching."
– Kate Lilley
Or: An Autobiography is a pleasure to read and reread, with an ebb and flow that’s cyclical, amorphous and gloriously ambiguous. Or resurrects and honours Orlando with playful care and genderfuckery, while revealing and refracting the work back on itself. This is a book of multitudes, resisting resolution and posing as many questions as it answers.
– Rae White
Toby Fitch in Or: An Autobiography offers us a virtuosic reshaping grammar, an or-ness, that challenges the stereotyping of his/their/our bodies, their genders and physical forms, their phases and exchanges. This is a brave work, vulnerable and ambitious, intimate yet expansive, lucid, satiric and frisky, as it shapeshifts across the page, making short shrift of expected poetic and gender modalities: poem/prose, line/sentence, collage/memoir, top/bottom, either/or/both? It’s ‘a wild experiment’, embracing language’s transformative power, its enthusiasms, its wardrobe of trickery, its incongruities and revelations, its erotics and its tenderness.
– Jill Jones