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About
Award-winning poet Ed Roberson confronts the realities of an era in which the fate of humanity and the very survival of our planet are uncertain. Departing from the traditional nature poem, Roberson's work reclaims a much older tradition, drawing into poetry's orbit what the physical and human sciences reveal about the state of a changing world. These poems test how far the lyric can go as an answer to our crisis, even calling into question poetic form itself. Reflections on the natural world and moments of personal interiority are interwoven with images of urbanscapes, environmental crises, and political instabilities. These poems speak life and truth to modernity in all its complexity. Throughout, Roberson takes up the ancient spiritual concern-the ephemerality of life-and gives us a new language to process the feeling of living in a century on the brink.
Morello's Venice
startled to hear the doctor say
this would be the last time he would see it,
a person used to keeping things alive
talking terminus - even more
startled when he returned
to hear him say it wasn't there
there were terrible rains
bookings cancelled.
when late he arrived,
everything was gone.
his wife had a cold.
they bundled together in blankets.
he refilled my prescription to
restore my soul.
Morello's Venice
startled to hear the doctor say
this would be the last time he would see it,
a person used to keeping things alive
talking terminus - even more
startled when he returned
to hear him say it wasn't there
there were terrible rains
bookings cancelled.
when late he arrived,
everything was gone.
his wife had a cold.
they bundled together in blankets.
he refilled my prescription to
restore my soul.
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Reviews
"These poems imbued with issues of climate and racial justice bristle with sound, word play, the everyday and the exotic, and numerous moments of beauty...His lyric [work]-contemplative, revelatory, deftly specific, painfully truthful, and sonically and formally dense-reminded me at times of Gwendolyn Brooks, Arthur Sze, and Susan Tichy."
Tracy Zeman
"Through inventive language that moves with the sonic beauty and unpredictability of lake breakers, or wheeling swallows, Ed Roberson's Asked What Has Changed is a challenging and urgent interrogation of and reckoning with the history, violence, and revelatory inevitability of interconnectedness between humans and nonhumans."
Evie Shockley
"Just as William Blake was able to descry an entire world in a kernel of sand, Roberson is ever alert to affinities between the small and the vast, the fleeting and the cosmic."
James Gibbons
Extended Details
- SeriesWesleyan Poetry