Novelist, poet and essayist Alvin Greenberg charmed generations of readers with his wit and cerebral musings and ability to manipulate the English language.
"He was an extremely productive writer, and I think never got the national attention that he should have," said Robert Warde, a retired professor at Macalester College in St. Paul. "He was a very well-respected writer among writers."
Greenberg, who taught English at Macalester for 34 years before his retirement in 1999, died Sept. 27 in Boise, Idaho, at age 83. The cause of death was esophageal cancer.
Greenberg wrote four novels, four story collections and 10 books of poetry. He also wrote a book of essays, entitled "Dogs of Memory," the librettos for three operas and an improvisational play for children, called "A Wall."
In 1983, Greenberg won the Associated Writing Programs' short fiction award. His work also appeared in the 1973 and 1982 editions of "Best American Short Stories."
Greenberg's first novel, "Going Nowhere," was published by Simon & Schuster in 1971 and was described in the New York Times Book Review as "funny" and "brilliant."
Harry Crews, the reviewer, wrote, "Any writer who will begin a novel of only 143 pages with a 400-word sentence, which sentence itself begins with 'Once upon a time,' can't be all bad. For one thing, you know he's not playing it safe."
Born in Cincinnati, Greenberg received an undergraduate degree from the University of Cincinnati and a Ph.D. in English from the University of Washington. He taught briefly at the University of Kentucky and was hired by Macalester in 1965. In 1966, he wrote the libretto of a satirical opera, called "Horspfal," with Eric Stokes, who taught at the University of Minnesota. The opera, about the despoiling of America since the arrival of Columbus, premiered at the Guthrie Theater. Greenberg and Stokes wrote two other operas.