Fran Brearton completed her Ph.D, on the Great War and Irish Poetry, at Durham earlier this year, and is currently lecturer in English at the University College of Scarborough (University of York).
Stephen Burt’s poems have also appeared in PN Review and Colorado Review; more will be in Carcanet’s forthcoming New Poetries 2 (Spring 1999). He is currently at Yale, writing about Randall Jarrell.
Simon Carnell is a freelance writer. He has reviewed for the TLS, Sunday Times, Spectator, New Statesman, London Magazine, Yorkshire Post, Guardian etc.
Kate Clanchy’s first collection Slattern (Chatto) won five literary awards including the Somerset Maugham. Her second, Samarkand, will be published in 1999.
Alan Dixon’s most recent collection is Transports (Redbeck Press). Earlier collections were published by the Fortune Press and Poet & Printer. He has poems due in P.N. Review, Partisan Review and elsewhere.
Ruth Fainlight’s most recent collection, Sugar-Paper Blue, published by Bloodaxe Books, was shortlisted for the 1997 Whitbread Prize.
Alice Fulton’s most recent book of poems is Sensual Math (W.W. Norton). ‘Fractal Amplifications’ is included in her collection of essays, Feeling as a Foreign Language: The Good Strangeness of Poetry, forthcoming from Graywolf Press. She is currently Professor of English at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Blair Gibb works as a fundraiser for Amnesty International. She is co-author of a book on corporate social responsibility, to be published by John Wiley & Sons in April 1999. She lives in Camden Town and is a student and trustee of the Poetry School.
Mark Goodwin lives in Leicestershire with Sarah and their daughter Tess. In 1996 he was awarded an East Midlands Arts Writers’ Bursary. He won an Eric Gregory Award in 1998.
Judith Hall’s first book To Put the Mouth To (1992) was selected for the National Poetry Series. Anatomy, Errata (1998) received the Ohio State University/The Journal Award in Poetry. She has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Ingram Merrill Foundation. She serves as poetry editor of The Antioch Review.
Sarah Hall lives between Cumbria and Virginia. She is working on a collection of poetry called ‘Butch’s Armchair’ and a novel. A selection of her poems is published in Faber’s First Pressings.
Edward Hirsch’s most recent book is On Love, published by Alfred A. Knopf, New York.
Jane Holland has published The Brief History of a Disreputable Woman with Bloodaxe. She is editor of Blade. Kissing the Pink, a novel, is due next year from Sceptre.
Richard Howard is a poet, translator and critic. He teaches at the School of the Arts at Columbia University and is poetry editor of Paris Review.
Joel Lane lives in Birmingham. He is the author of The Earth Wire, a collection of short stories from Egerton Press; and The Edge of the Screen, a collection of poems from Arc.
Joanne Limburg lives in London. She won an Eric Gregory Award in 1998 and is currently preparing her first book-length manuscript.
James McCabe was born in Dublin in 1966, and completed a D.Phil in Oxford on ‘The Neutral Heart: Irish Poetry and World War Two’. His collection The White Battlefields of Silence is forthcoming from Dedalus.
Peter McDonald is Reader in English at the University of Bristol. He has published two poetry collections with Bloodaxe, and his latest critical study, Mistaken Identities: Essays on Poetry and Northern Ireland, appeared last year from OUP.
Kathleen McPhilemy was born in Northern Ireland and now lives in Oxford with her family. Her latest volume is A Tented Peace (Katabasis, 1995).
Joyelle McSweeney is co-editor of Oxford Poetry.
Paul Muldoon, who was born in Northern Ireland in 1951, is the Howard G. B. Clark Professor in the Humanities at Princeton University. His latest collection, Hay, was published in October by Faber.
Kelli Rae Patton holds an MFA in creative writing from the Universirty of Virginia. She did her undergraduate work at Harvard. She is at work on a manuscript called Pocket Wilderness.
John Redmond is a poet and critic from Dalkey, Co. Dublin.
Ian Sansom is a research fellow at Emmanuel College, Cambridge.
Brenda Shaughnessy’s first book of poems will be published in the spring of 1999 by Farrar, Straus & Giroux.
Anne Stevenson’s Collected Poems is published by OUP. Her critical study Five Looks at Elizabeth Bishop appeared from Bellew/Agenda this summer; and the University of Michigan Press published a collection of essays, Between the Iceberg and the Ship.
Matthew Sweeney’s most recent publications are The Bridal Suite (Cape) and Penguin Modern Poets 12 (both 1997). He is co-editor, with Jo Shapcott, of Emergency Kit (Faber, 1996) and, with Ken Smith, of Beyond Bedlam (Anvil, 1997).
Eleanor Ross Taylor’s new collection, Late Leisure, will be published in 1999 by Louisiana State University Press.
Roland Trope, with his wife and son, lives in New York City. He practices law, writes poetry, and is adjunct professor of law at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.
Sidney Wade lives and teaches English in Gainesville, Florida. Her second collection of poems, Green, has just been published by the University of South Carolina Press.
David Wheatley is an editor of Metre. His first collection, Thirst, was published by Gallery Press.
Frances Williams won an Eric Gregory Award in 1998 and is a freelance journalist living in London.
Gerard Woodward has published two collections of poetry with Chatto, both of which were Poetry Book Society Choices. A third, Island to Island, is due in 1999.
Page(s) 99-100
magazine list
- Features
- zines
- 10th Muse
- 14
- Acumen
- Agenda
- Ambit
- Angel Exhaust
- ARTEMISpoetry
- Atlas
- Blithe Spirit
- Borderlines
- Brando's hat
- Brittle Star
- Candelabrum
- Cannon's Mouth, The
- Chroma
- Coffee House, The
- Dream Catcher
- Equinox
- Erbacce
- Fabric
- Fire
- Floating Bear, The
- French Literary Review, The
- Frogmore Papers, The
- Global Tapestry
- Grosseteste Review
- Homeless Diamonds
- Interpreter's House, The
- Iota
- Journal, The
- Lamport Court
- London Magazine, The
- Magma
- Matchbox
- Matter
- Modern Poetry in Translation
- Monkey Kettle
- Moodswing
- Neon Highway
- New Welsh Review
- North, The
- Oasis
- Obsessed with pipework
- Orbis
- Oxford Poetry
- Painted, spoken
- Paper, The
- Pen Pusher Magazine
- Poetry Cornwall
- Poetry London
- Poetry London (1951)
- Poetry Nation
- Poetry Review, The
- Poetry Salzburg Review
- Poetry Scotland
- Poetry Wales
- Private Tutor
- Purple Patch
- Quarto
- Rain Dog
- Reach Poetry
- Review, The
- Rialto, The
- Second Aeon
- Seventh Quarry, The
- Shearsman
- Smiths Knoll
- Smoke
- South
- Staple
- Strange Faeces
- Tabla Book of New Verse, The
- Thumbscrew
- Tolling Elves
- Ugly Tree, The
- Weyfarers
- Wolf, The
- Yellow Crane, The