John Arnold published Zarathustra Flies East in 1995. Ros Barber is the author of How Things Are On Thursday (Anvil) and the adjudicator of this year's Frogmore Poetry Prize. Peter Benson has published seven novels, among them The Levels, which won the Guardian Fiction Prize, the Authors' Club First Novel Award and the Betty Trask Prize. Byron Beynon is the author of The Restaurant Of Mud, among other collections. C R Cajarc has published poetry and plays in the UK and New Zealand. His novella Days (Hazard Press 1997) won the Quote/Unquote Hazard Press Short Fiction Award. Peter Carpenter is the author of several published collections, including The Black-Out Book (Arc). Hair Of The Dog is forthcoming from Shoestring this summer. Ian Caws' most recent collection is Taro Fair. Ross Cogan is a former winner of the Frogmore Poetry Prize. His first collection, Stalin's Desk, was published by Oversteps last year. Michael Foley lives in North London. Robin Ford is the author of Never Quite Prepared For Light (Arrowhead Press 2004). Margaret Galvin won the Brendan Kennelly/ Sunday Tribune Poetry Award in 2003. Two collections published by Tuba Press. Michael Paul Hogan's Estocada was published by the Frogmore Press in its Crabflower Pamphlets series. Nicholas Manning is Australian. Currently living in Paris, working towards a Master's degree at the Sorbonne. John McCullough lives in Brighton. His pamphlet collection, Unplugged At Café Atlantic, was published by the Waterloo Press in 2004. His work has appeared widely in magazines. William Oxley is the author of numerous works of poetry and criticism and has also published an autobiography. Philip Sealey lives in Egmating in Germany. Robert Seatter's first collection was Travelling To The Fish Orchards (Seren). Kay Sexton is a Jerry Jazz Fiction Award winner. Her short short story Domestic Violence was runner-up in the Guardian fiction contest judged by Dave Eggers. K V Skene has published widely in the UK, US, Canada, Australia and Ireland. A chapbook, Edith, was published by Flarestack in the UK. Paul Surman lives in Oxford. His poetry is published in the UK and the US. Michael Swan's debut collection When They Come For You (Frogmore) has just appeared in a second edition. Alexey Talimonov published three books of cartoons in Russia and Ukraine in the early nineties. Andrew Waterman's Collected Poems were published by Carcanet in 2000. Emily Wills' collection Diverting The Sea was published by the Rialto in 2000. Howard Wright won the Frogmore Poetry Prize in 2004. He is a lecturer in Applied Arts at the University of Ulster at Belfast. Twelve of his poems are included in New Soundings (QUB/Blackstaff Press 2003). Robert Yates lives in London and has published in various magazines.
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magazine list
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- Pen Pusher Magazine
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