A unique work of science and poetry, winner of the Cave Canem Prize, selected by Natasha Trethewey
A research biologist most recently at the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin, Brandon Kilbourne illuminates the intersections between science and poetry in poems that demonstrate the wonder, curiosity, and precision required by both disciplines.
Natural History opens by confronting the hidden histories within the study of biology and its links to colonialism, including the revelation that European scientists used slave ships to transport specimens from Africa and the Americas back to Europe. Across the collection, Kilbourne describes how these histories of exploitation are still reflected in dioramas of elephants, rhinoceroses, and African people displayed in natural history museums. Other poems narrate the intricate work of studying fossils, and a longer sequence recounts an expedition above the Arctic Circle to recover evidence of how a fish’s fins gave rise to the diversity of limbs found among amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals.
Natural History is a rare and fascinating debut, and Kilbourne’s exquisite eye brings the role of the working biologist to life.
“Kilbourne pushes back against . . . the carefully made museum with its curated forgetting, silences, and erasures, even the scientists (then and now) who could never have imagined someone like him turning his early calling not only into scientific study but also into poetry. Natural History is a marvel.”—Natasha Trethewey
“Brandon Kilbourne’s poems move masterfully between the technical and the lyrical, from ancient fossils to modern museum halls, exploring how our understanding of nature is inseparable from our essential humanity. Through vivid imagery and careful attention to both biological detail and emotional experience, Natural History offers a luminous perspective on how we collect, classify, and make meaning of the natural world. These poems demonstrate the insights possible when scientific expertise meets poetic sensitivity, creating work that is both intellectually rigorous and deeply moving.”—Neil Shubin, author of Your Inner Fish and Ends of the Earth
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