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Born in Preston Lancashire in 1963, poet Michael Symmons Roberts is also an award-winning radio writer, a documentary filmmaker for the BBC, and a frequent collaborator with the composer James MacMillan.

He is the author of several books of poetry, including Soft Keys (1993), Raising Sparks (1999), Burning Babylon (2001), Corpus (2004), The Half Healed (2008), Drysalter (2013), Mancunia (2017), and Ransom (2021).

In addition to being shortlisted for the 2005 Griffin Poetry Prize, Corpus was shortlisted for the 2004 Forward Prize and the 2004 T.S. Eliot Prize, and won the 2004 Whitbread Poetry Award.

Symmons Roberts is Professor of Poetry at Manchester Metropolitan University, is married with three sons, and lives near Manchester.

Judges’ Citation

There is a patient, almost forensic methodology in the poems of Michael Symmons Roberts, a systematic building up or stripping away of layers, until the subject and the sense of each poem is either established or exposed.

There is a patient, almost forensic methodology in the poems of Michael Symmons Roberts, a systematic building up or stripping away of layers, until the subject and the sense of each poem is either established or exposed. This collection, Corpus, is almost a poetic autopsy, an investigation of the body, sometimes for signs of life and sometimes for what might loosely be called the human spirit. But if this is poetry in the religious tradition, there is nothing mystical or superstitious about Corpus. Just to dare to consider such a concept as the soul, the poet must explore wildly differing aspects of human behaviour, from gross acts of torture to moments of ecstatic love; with a photographic accuracy and frame by frame, almost documentary observations, his eye is unflinching. Knowing but never sagacious, confident but never preachy or dogmatic, this is Symmons Roberts at his most readable, most lyrical best.