'Brilliant, "restructuring the known existing facts", to make this admirable, entertaining, attractive account of the origin of the Universe.' Professor Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell 'The universe is intrinsically poetic, but rarely does someone with expert credentials endeavor to describe it in that mode. Joseph Conlon's two extended poems offer a glimpse into the workings of the universe in galloping verse rich with imagery.' Sean Carroll, author of The Biggest Ideas in the Universe 'This book offers readers an inventive and refreshing opportunity to engage with modern cosmology, at the same time as contributing to our cultures long tradition of connecting science with verse.' Nature Astronomy 'Joe Conlon is a marvel. His subject the origin of the universe and our efforts to comprehend it is vaster and stranger than anything in English poetry. But these fizzy, nonchalantly rhymed, eminently readable poems are also a masterclass in simile. "Elements" and "Galaxies" will tell you about the structure of a hydrogen atom, various intriguing characters in the history of modern physics, and why galaxies quantum origins ("rough seas of storm-tossed noise") might resemble Twitter.' Hannah Sullivan, T. S. Eliot Prize-winning author of Three Poems 'Absolutely wonderful... remarkable... What a gift to the cosmologists and non-cosmologists of the world!' Latham Boyle, Cosmologist at the University of Edinburgh 'These are erudite yet entertaining poems [ which] ingeniously explain atomic physics and narrate the birth of the universe in the broadest language, with a tremendous range of allusion, metaphor, imagination, action and humour... an enthralling story and all somehow crafted into rhyming verse.' Oxford Prospect Arts