Another Shooting

Ed Roberson

Chicago is doing its homeChicago thing—     sweet babyblue skies, fading into haze on the lakehorizon, hugepuffs of  gray-bottomed cumulus, starkautumn light in brilliant 55 degrees airand a forecast of  possiblesnow flurries tomorrow.I love it when it does that greedyfuck you meteorology thing—this town ain’t big enough forthe weather and     a weather mansomebody got to go— it takes youout                              in style.

 

You don’t even know thatit is.     anythingyou don’t know.     it just is.like the names of  streets.     north   south.elm.Murder.     The capital isn’t hereOur per capitatoo small         though our totals reignas natural as rain  as police.But we     die.      protectedyes     this here just then didn’t make sense.And neither does thatit issomething accepted.

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Born and raised in Pittsburgh, Ed Roberson studied painting in his youth and was educated at the University of Pittsburgh. His extensive travels inform his work, which is also influenced by spirituals and the blues, and by visual art, such as the mixed-media collages of Romare Bearden. Poet and critic Michael Palmer has called Roberson “one of the most deeply innovative and critically acute voices of our time.”

Roberson is the author of numerous collections of poetry, including Asked What Has Changed (2021); MPH + Selected Motorcycle Poems (2021); the chapbook Closest Pronunciation (2013); To See the Earth Before the End of the World (2010), which was a runner up for the Los Angeles Times Poetry Award; The New Wing of the Labyrinth (2009); City Eclogue (2006); Atmosphere Conditions (1999), which was chosen by Nathaniel Mackey for the National Poetry Series and was a finalist for the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize; Just In: Word of Navigational Change: New and Selected Work (1998); and Voices Cast Out to Talk Us In (1995), which won the Iowa Poetry Prize. His earlier collections include Etai-Eken (1975) and When Thy King is a Boy (1970). Words and phrases in Roberson’s experimental poetry actively resist parsing, using instead what Mackey has called “double-jointed syntax” to explore and bend themes of race, history, and culture. “I’m not creating a new language. I’m just trying to un-White-Out the one we’ve got,” said Roberson in a 2006 interview with Chicago Postmodern Poetry.

Roberson’s honors include the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize in 2016, the Lila Wallace Writers’ Award, the Poetry Society of America’s Shelley Award, and the 2016 PEN/Voelcker Award for Poetry. His work has been included in Best American Poetry.

He lives in Chicago, where he has taught at the University of Chicago, Columbia College, and Northwestern University.

October 2020

Chicago, Illinois

Editor
Adrian Matejka

Creative Director and Exhibitions Co-curator
Fred Sasaki

Senior Editor
Lindsay Garbutt

Associate Editor
Holly Amos

Associate Editor
Angela Flores

Founded in Chicago by Harriet Monroe in 1912, Poetry is the oldest monthly devoted to verse in the English-speaking world. Harriet Monroe’s “Open Door” policy, set forth in Volume I of the magazine, remains the most succinct statement of Poetry’s mission: to print the best poetry written today, in whatever style, genre, or approach.

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