American poet Kenneth Fearing was born in Oak Park, IL, in 1902. He
graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1924. Moving to Chicago,
he held jobs as a salesman and a millhand, among other things, and
eventually went to work for a Chicago newspaper as a reporter. He moved
to New York City, and began earning a living as a freelance writer. He
wrote many stories and novels, but mostly under pseudonyms because his
first love was poetry and he only wrote prose for the money.
Politically a progressive, Fearing's poems tended to be more on the
gritty, rough-edged side rather than the dreamy, romantic verses
commonly associated with poetry; a biographer once noted that Fearing's
poems "present a corrosive, weirdly lighted picture of contemporary
American life", and a critic once said that his work "reads like
nightmares induced by New York newspapers and modern civilization . . .
not cheering to read, but it haunts one".