Annemarie Austin’s fourth collection, Door upon Door, was published by Bloodaxe in August 1999.
Mike Barlow is a visual artist and poet living in Lancaster.
Michael Bartholomew-Biggs is a university mathematics lecturer. His poetry has appeared in many magazines and his first collection, Anglicised by Common Use, was published by Waldean Press in 1998.
Matthew Barton’s first collection, Learning to Row, was published last year by Peterloo.
John Berryman (1914-1972) was one of the most important mid-century American poets. Berryman’s Shakespeare, edited by John Haffenden, has recently been published by FSG.
Fran Brearton is lecturer in English at Queen’s University, Belfast. Her study, The Great War in Irish Poetry, is due from OUP this spring.
Heather Clark is a graduate of Harvard and Trinity College, Dublin. She is currently writing a D.Phil on the Belfast Group at Lincoln College, Oxford.
Philip Coleman is completing a Ph.D. on John Berryman at Trinity College, Dublin. He was a Fulbright scholar at the University of Minnesota in 1998, where he worked with Berryman’s manuscript collection. He has edited College Green.
Tony Curtis is Professor of Poetry at the University of Glamorgan, where he teaches the M.Phil in Writing. He is editor of The Art of Seamus Heaney, the fourth edition of which is due this year from Seren.
Elaine Feinstein’s last book of poems, Daylight ( Carcanet), was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation; her latest, Gold, comes out in this year. She has recently edited After Pushkin for the Folio Society, and is working on the biography of Ted Hughes.
Peter Finch lives in Cardiff. His reputation is often based on his dallying with experimental fringes. He is author of many poetry collections, including Useful (Seren) and Antibodies (Stride). He is Chief Executive of Academi, the Welsh National Literature Promotion Agency and Society for Writers.
John Fuller is the author of many collections of poetry, including Stones and Fires (1996). His W.H. Auden: a Commentary was published by Faber in 1998.
Sam Gardiner won the 1993 National Poetry Competition. His first collection, Protestant Windows, is forthcoming from Lagan Press.
Lavinia Greenlaw was born in London in 1962. She has published two collections: Night Photograph (1993) and A World Where News Travelled Slowly (1997).
Eamon Grennan is from Dublin and teaches at Vassar College. His most recent volumes are Relations: New and Selected Poems (Graywolf Press) and a volume of translations, Leopardi: Selected Poems (Princeton and Dedalus). In Ireland, his poems are published by Gallery.
Philip Gross’s latest collection, The Wasting Game (Bloodaxe), was shortlisted for the Whitbread poetry prize. He teaches Creative Studies at Bath Spa University College.
Teresa Halikowska-Smith read Polish and English at Warsaw University and Comparative Literature at Oxford. She has taught Polish Literature and is at present engaged in freelance writing, reviewing and translation. She has co-edited an anthology of modern Polish short-stories, The Eagle and the Crow (Serpent’s Tail, 1996).
Stuart Henson’s most recent collections are Ember Music (Peterloo Poets) and Clair de Lune, a booklet with drawings by Mark Bennett (Shoestring Press).
Hamish Ironside was born in Reading in 1971. He is currently working as an antiquarian bookseller in London.
Helen Johnson lives in Leicestershire. She has published in numerous magazines. She also writes children’s fiction.
Frederick Jones has taught in Cape Town and Kent. He now lives in Liverpool, where he teaches at the University. His first full collection, Congreve’s Balsamic Elixir, came out in 1995 from Peterloo.
Giovanni Malito is the editor of The Brobdingnagian Times. His recent publication credits include Envoi, Orbis, Brangle and The Yellow Crane.
Nicholas Murray’s most recent book is World Enough and Time: The Life of Andrew Marvell. His poems have appeared in many magazines.
Graham Nelson teaches pure mathematics, is an occasional poet and critic, and co-edits Oxford Poetry.
Dennis O’Driscoll’s latest collection is Weather Permitting (Anvil), a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. He received a 1999 Lannan award.
Mac Oliver recently completed two fellowships at Yale through the New Haven Teachers’ Institute. He is now teaching at the University of Minnesota.
Marita Over won an Eric Gregory Award in 1992. She has published poetry and reviews in various magazines. Her first collection, Other Lilies (Frogmore), appeared in 1997.
Sheenagh Pugh’s latest collection is Stonelight (Seren, 1999).
Justin Quinn’s second book of poems, Privacy (Carcanet), was published in 1999. He is an editor of Metre and works at the Charles University, Prague.
John Redmond is lecturing at Queen Mary and Westfield College, London. A selection of his poems recently appeared in New Poetries 2 from Carcanet Press.
Colin Robinson has had poems in various magazines, has published a novel and EFL books, and has had plays performed.
Carole Satyamurti has published three collections of poetry, of which the most recent is Striking Distance (1994). Her Selected Poems appeared from OUP in 1997. A new collection, Love & Variations, will be published by Bloodaxe in February.
Anne Stevenson’s Collected Poems is published by OUP. Her Five Looks at Elizabeth Bishop (Agenda/Bellew) and Between the Iceberg and the Ship (Michigan) appeared in 1998.
Virgil Suarez was born in Havana in 1962. He is author of four novels and a collection of short stories. You Come Singing, a new collection of poems, is published by Tia Chucha Press/Northwestern University. He lives in Tallahassee.
Howard Wright lectures in art history at the University of Ulster, Belfast. His pamphlet Usquebaugh was published by Redbeck in 1997.
Page(s) 87-88
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