Chicago poet who helped found one of largest US black-owned book publishers dies at age 69

By AP
Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Chicago poet who helped found black press dies

CHICAGO — Carolyn M. Rodgers, a Chicago poet and writer who helped found one of the country’s oldest and largest black-owned book publishers, has died. She was 69.

The Chicago-based Third World Press says Rodgers died April 2 at Mercy Hospital after battling an undisclosed illness.

The Chicago native wrote nine books, including “How I got Ovah.” Her work often delved into the experiences of black women.

Rodgers is credited with being a star of the black arts movement of the 1960s and 1970s. She helped found Third World Press in the 1960s. She also started her own publishing company, Eden Press.

Funeral services have been held. A public memorial is planned May 4 where Rodgers’ work will be read.

Rodgers is survived by her mother and two sisters.

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