Michael Symmons Roberts – Georg Bollenbeck Fellow 2023
Michael   Symmons Roberts was born in 1963 in  Preston, Lancashire. After   graduating from Oxford University, where he  read Philosophy &   Theology, he joined the BBC. His last position  at the corporation was   Executive Producer and Head of Development for  BBC Religion & Ethics   before he left the BBC to focus on his  writing. 
Michael  Symmons  Roberts has published eight  collections of poetry, two novels,  and was  co-writer for two  non-fiction books. He is a regular  broadcaster for the  BBC (Radios 3  and 4), with programmes ranging from  features (e.g. “A  Fearful  Symmetry” [2011]; “Northern Drift” [2022]),  radio plays (among  them  “Utopia” [2016], “The Sleeper [2017]; “Paradise  Lost” [2018] and   “Danger 2023” [2023]). His continuing collaboration  with composer James   MacMillan has led to two BBC Proms choral  commissions (“The Birds of   Rhiannon“ [2001], “Quickening” [2009]), song  cycles (among them  “Raising  Sparks” [2002]), music theatre works and  operas for the Royal  Opera  House (“Clemency” [2011]), Scottish Opera,  Boston Lyric Opera  and Welsh  National Opera (“The Sacrifice” [2007],  “The Sleepers”  [2011]).
Michael  Symmons Roberts has received  several awards,  such as the Forward Poetry  Prize for Best Collection  (2013; 2004), the  Costa Poetry Prize (2013),  the Jerwood Prize for  Non-Fiction (2009,  with Paul Farley), the  Whitbread Poetry Award  (2004), the Sandford St.  Martin Premier Award  (2002) and the Eric  Gregory Award (1988).
Five  of his poetry  collections have also been  shortlisted for the T.S.  Eliot Prize (Ransom,  2021; Mancunia, 2017;  Drysalter, 2013; Corpus,  2004; Burning Babylon,  2001).
He is a  trustee of the Royal  Literary Fund, fellow of the  Royal Society of  Literature and has  judged a number of poetry awards. He  teaches poetry  at Manchester  Metropolitan University.
