Joseph Allen lives in Ballymena, County Antrim, Northern Ireland.
Denise Bennett teaches Creative Writing in Portsmouth; her collection American Dresses was published in 2000.
John Buck is a retired journalist, living in north London. His poems have appeared in Envoi, Iota, The Journal, Pulsar and elsewhere.
Maggie Butt runs the Creative and Writing course at Middlesex University. Her pamphlet Quintana Roo was published in 2003 by Acumen. Her website is http://www.lifesoup.net/
Michael Curtis writes poetry, stories and articles. He has performed across Europe at festivals, on the radio, in schools, libraries and at numerous other venues. His latest collection Long Haul has just been published by Redbeck Press.
Barbara Daniels has six collections of poetry published: the most
recent, The Cartographer Sleeps (Shoestring Press) includes several prize-winning poems.
Jane Deverson is an ex-journalist whose poetry has been published in a variety of magazines.
Barbara Dordi's poetry has been published in magazines,
anthologies and on the Internet. Her most recent collection Entre-Deux, written in English and French, is illustrated in colour by Russi Dordi.
Val Doyle has been a freelance journalist. Her collection Paperbacks with Chips in Bell Street was published in 2001 and was followed by A Pause in Time in 2003.
Performance poet Hilary Drapper runs poetry workshops for the Write Women's Poetry Group in Thanet, Kent. Her poems have appeared in a variety of magazines.
Ann Drysdale has been a visiting lecturer at Cardiff University and UWE Bristol. She is the author of four recent poetry collections published by Peterloo. A Landcape in Waiting , a book published this year as a result of a residency was nominated for the Welsh Book of the Year award. Her new volume from Peterloo Between
Dryden and Duffy: Another Collection was launched in autumn 2005.
Beata Duncan has twice been a prize winner in the National Poetry Competition. Her work has been anthologised and published in magazines including London Magazine, New Statesman, Observer, Rialto and Spectator. It has been broadcast on BBC Radio, including 'Poetry Please'.
Fiona Dunscombe is the author of two radio plays broadcast by LBC. She has an MA in Contemporary Literature from London University and has been a visiting lecturer at Brunel University. She is currently seeking an agent for her first novel Kissing Dad and is working on a sequel.
John Enright lives in Pago Pago,American Samoa. His collection of
poetry Commentaries, was published in 1992, and On Turning Sixty, in 2005. He is currently working on a novel.
Gregory Gilbert Gumbs is working on a PhD in Political Science in Washington, DC. His poems have been published in journals
world-wide.
Maggie Harris' first collection Limbolands won the Guyana Prize for Literature in 2002. She is now working on a second collection, From Berbice to Broadstairs.
Hazell Hills has p resented her work at The Other Place in Stratford, and had poems published in Orbis, Frogmore Papers, Other Poetry, Poetry NZ, Staple, Iota and Envoi.
Nigel Humphreys lives in West Wales. He is regularly published in poetry magazines since re-launching his writing career. He is a member of the Aberystwyth University Arts Centre Poetry Works Group.
Eve Jackson has published three non-fiction books and her poems have appeared in many journals and anthologies.
Judy Kendall has just completed a PhD at the University of
Gloucester, researching the process of poetry composing. Her work has recently been in Stand amongst other magazines; she also reviews poetry books for Poetry Review.
Lavinia Lewis belongs to the Write Women Writer's group in Thanet, Kent.
Nigel McLoughlin is Field Chair in Creative Writing at the University of Gloucestershire. He has worked as a tutor with the London School of Journalism and as a Senior Tutor and Curriculum Design Consultant with the Open College of the Arts. He has a PhD from Lancaster University and has written three collections of poetry. His poetry and translations from Irish and German have
been published worldwide.
Hubert Moore has had five collections published, three from Enitharmon and the most recent from Shoestring. His pamphlet,
Beautifully kept things, was a winner in the Poetry Business Competition, 2003. The Hearing Room, his sixth full collection, is due from Shoestring Press in the summer.
D.A. Prince lives in Leicestershire. Her second pamphlet from Pikestaff Press, Keeping in Touch, was published in 2002.
Marilyn Ricci's poems have appeared in many magazines including The Interpreter's House, Other Poetry, Envoi, Smith's Knoll, The New Writer and Obsessed with Pipework.
Welsh born, Mary Rice is both sculptor and poet, she uses contrasting materials and the written word to create familiar imagery that relate to family and to celebrate womanhood, and her Celtic roots.
Terry Quinn is a Medical Engineer at Royal Preston Hospital. He is one of three local poets who developed a local Arts Hour on Preston FM radio. 'The adrenaline rush from a live broadcast is amazing.'
Daphne Schiller is a retired teacher and counsellor. She gained an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia, and has published poems, stories and articles.
Ted Walter has tutored adult 'Writing for Pleasure' for well over 25 years. He is widely published in magazines and anthologies; his latest
collection blue moon is published by Willing Words.
Christine West lives in a pottery village in Central France. She belongs to the writers' group, Lumineuse, is working on her first novel and on a collection of poems exploring childhood and the parent-child relationship.
Since her first poem appeared in Equinox three years ago, Lyn White has been published in South, Connections, Smiths Knoll
and in the Blinking eye anthology, Piety and Plum Porridge.
Hilary Williams lives on the edge of Dartmoor where she enjoys reading and writing poetry and prose.
Sarah Williams lives on the Kent/East Sussex border and has had poems published in magazines including The New Writer, OWP, Fire, and Coffee House.
Vicky Wilson is a freelance editor and the author of London Houses: a handbook for visitors. She studied poetry at the University of Kent and has been published in Acumen.
Denise Bennett teaches Creative Writing in Portsmouth; her collection American Dresses was published in 2000.
John Buck is a retired journalist, living in north London. His poems have appeared in Envoi, Iota, The Journal, Pulsar and elsewhere.
Maggie Butt runs the Creative and Writing course at Middlesex University. Her pamphlet Quintana Roo was published in 2003 by Acumen. Her website is http://www.lifesoup.net/
Michael Curtis writes poetry, stories and articles. He has performed across Europe at festivals, on the radio, in schools, libraries and at numerous other venues. His latest collection Long Haul has just been published by Redbeck Press.
Barbara Daniels has six collections of poetry published: the most
recent, The Cartographer Sleeps (Shoestring Press) includes several prize-winning poems.
Jane Deverson is an ex-journalist whose poetry has been published in a variety of magazines.
Barbara Dordi's poetry has been published in magazines,
anthologies and on the Internet. Her most recent collection Entre-Deux, written in English and French, is illustrated in colour by Russi Dordi.
Val Doyle has been a freelance journalist. Her collection Paperbacks with Chips in Bell Street was published in 2001 and was followed by A Pause in Time in 2003.
Performance poet Hilary Drapper runs poetry workshops for the Write Women's Poetry Group in Thanet, Kent. Her poems have appeared in a variety of magazines.
Ann Drysdale has been a visiting lecturer at Cardiff University and UWE Bristol. She is the author of four recent poetry collections published by Peterloo. A Landcape in Waiting , a book published this year as a result of a residency was nominated for the Welsh Book of the Year award. Her new volume from Peterloo Between
Dryden and Duffy: Another Collection was launched in autumn 2005.
Beata Duncan has twice been a prize winner in the National Poetry Competition. Her work has been anthologised and published in magazines including London Magazine, New Statesman, Observer, Rialto and Spectator. It has been broadcast on BBC Radio, including 'Poetry Please'.
Fiona Dunscombe is the author of two radio plays broadcast by LBC. She has an MA in Contemporary Literature from London University and has been a visiting lecturer at Brunel University. She is currently seeking an agent for her first novel Kissing Dad and is working on a sequel.
John Enright lives in Pago Pago,American Samoa. His collection of
poetry Commentaries, was published in 1992, and On Turning Sixty, in 2005. He is currently working on a novel.
Gregory Gilbert Gumbs is working on a PhD in Political Science in Washington, DC. His poems have been published in journals
world-wide.
Maggie Harris' first collection Limbolands won the Guyana Prize for Literature in 2002. She is now working on a second collection, From Berbice to Broadstairs.
Hazell Hills has p resented her work at The Other Place in Stratford, and had poems published in Orbis, Frogmore Papers, Other Poetry, Poetry NZ, Staple, Iota and Envoi.
Nigel Humphreys lives in West Wales. He is regularly published in poetry magazines since re-launching his writing career. He is a member of the Aberystwyth University Arts Centre Poetry Works Group.
Eve Jackson has published three non-fiction books and her poems have appeared in many journals and anthologies.
Judy Kendall has just completed a PhD at the University of
Gloucester, researching the process of poetry composing. Her work has recently been in Stand amongst other magazines; she also reviews poetry books for Poetry Review.
Lavinia Lewis belongs to the Write Women Writer's group in Thanet, Kent.
Nigel McLoughlin is Field Chair in Creative Writing at the University of Gloucestershire. He has worked as a tutor with the London School of Journalism and as a Senior Tutor and Curriculum Design Consultant with the Open College of the Arts. He has a PhD from Lancaster University and has written three collections of poetry. His poetry and translations from Irish and German have
been published worldwide.
Hubert Moore has had five collections published, three from Enitharmon and the most recent from Shoestring. His pamphlet,
Beautifully kept things, was a winner in the Poetry Business Competition, 2003. The Hearing Room, his sixth full collection, is due from Shoestring Press in the summer.
D.A. Prince lives in Leicestershire. Her second pamphlet from Pikestaff Press, Keeping in Touch, was published in 2002.
Marilyn Ricci's poems have appeared in many magazines including The Interpreter's House, Other Poetry, Envoi, Smith's Knoll, The New Writer and Obsessed with Pipework.
Welsh born, Mary Rice is both sculptor and poet, she uses contrasting materials and the written word to create familiar imagery that relate to family and to celebrate womanhood, and her Celtic roots.
Terry Quinn is a Medical Engineer at Royal Preston Hospital. He is one of three local poets who developed a local Arts Hour on Preston FM radio. 'The adrenaline rush from a live broadcast is amazing.'
Daphne Schiller is a retired teacher and counsellor. She gained an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia, and has published poems, stories and articles.
Ted Walter has tutored adult 'Writing for Pleasure' for well over 25 years. He is widely published in magazines and anthologies; his latest
collection blue moon is published by Willing Words.
Christine West lives in a pottery village in Central France. She belongs to the writers' group, Lumineuse, is working on her first novel and on a collection of poems exploring childhood and the parent-child relationship.
Since her first poem appeared in Equinox three years ago, Lyn White has been published in South, Connections, Smiths Knoll
and in the Blinking eye anthology, Piety and Plum Porridge.
Hilary Williams lives on the edge of Dartmoor where she enjoys reading and writing poetry and prose.
Sarah Williams lives on the Kent/East Sussex border and has had poems published in magazines including The New Writer, OWP, Fire, and Coffee House.
Vicky Wilson is a freelance editor and the author of London Houses: a handbook for visitors. She studied poetry at the University of Kent and has been published in Acumen.
Page(s) 52-53
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