Edward M. Roscoe

Edward Monroe Roscoe (Toronto, July 28 1921 - Noble City, August 7 1991) was a Lovian writer, poet, essayist, and politician. He was elected Governor of Sylvania in the State Elections, 1958 and consecutively re-elected in 1960. After three consecutive terms of Thelma Parr Sennett Roscoe was re-elected in 1968. He was a very popular Governor who tried to run for Congressman, but failed several times doing so.

In the 1940s he started writing poems and short stories in the genre of Anton P. Chekhov. These stories would remain unrevealed to the public until the 1970s, when these made E.M. Roscoe famous. In the meanwhile he had been writing several modernist poems and society essays. His most famous work probably is Essay on the People's Thoughts.

Family
Edward M. Roscoe was born in Toronto and had an American father and an Italian mother, who died early. Edward was married to Terry Robertson Roscoe and had two children: Mary Monroe Roscoe and Elisabeth Robertson Roscoe.