Cyn Kitchen on Broken Hallelujah — poetry rooted in Knox County prairie

Cyn Kitchen at the WGIL studio, Friday, March 6, 2026. (WGIL)
Knox College English professor and lifelong Knox County resident Cyn Kitchen joined Galesburg's Morning News Friday to talk about her first full-length poetry collection, Broken Hallelujah, published by Finishing Line Press.
Kitchen, who grew up in Galesburg and graduated from GHS in 1982, returned to higher education 14 years after high school — starting at Carl Sandburg College before earning her degree at Knox College, where she now serves as professor and chair of the English department.
In this conversation, Kitchen talks about the title and philosophy behind Broken Hallelujah, the writing window at her Maquon home that looks out onto the prairie, the role of faith, doubt, and grief in the collection, and what it means to spend decades teaching others to write while quietly building her own body of work.
Kitchen closes the interview by reading her poem "The Returning" — inspired by the massive flocks of snow geese that fill the Knox County skies each spring.
Broken Hallelujah is currently available for pre-order at a discount through cynkitchen.net, with June delivery. Hard copies will be available to the general public after June.
Topics covered in this interview include:
Cyn Kitchen's work has appeared in American Writer's Review, Poetry South, Poetry Quarterly, Cutleaf, and Appalachian Review. A Pushcart Prize nominee, her work has been shortlisted for the Raymond Carver Short Story Award, the storySouth Million Writers Award, and Best of the Web. She is also the author of Ten Tongues, a collection of short stories.

Cyn Kitchen at the WGIL studio, Friday, March 6, 2026. (WGIL)