Matthew Barton teaches creative writing at Horfield Prison, Bristol. He recently won joint first prize in the Newent Arts Centre national poetry competition. He also translates from German and teaches the flute.
Stephen Burt is a graduate student in English at Yale. He has worked as a travel-guide editor and as a secretary, and also writes prose about obscure pop groups. He grew up in Washington, D.C.
Sara Clemence is completing a degree in International Relations and Writing and the Johns Hopkins University (U.S.A.). This is her first published poem.
Alec Dinwoodie is a member of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and a doctoral candidate at New College, Oxford.
Philip Hobsbaum is a Professor of English Literature at Glasgow University. He has chaired several writers’ groups, including one in Belfast where he formerly taught. He has published four collections of poems and seven critical books, including one on metre and rhythm shortly to be brought out by Routledge.
Tim Kendall has just completed a study of Paul Muldoon’s poetry, to be published by Seren Books in May 1996.
John Redmond is a poet and critic from Dalkey in Ireland. He has written for the London Review of Books and the Times Literary Supplement.
Charles Simic is the author of seventeen collections of poetry, four books of prose and numerous books of translations. He has won many awards, including a MacArthur Fellowship and a Pulitzer Prize. His new book of poems is Wedding in Hell from Harcourt Brace.
Margaret Young has just finished a book of essays called Fringe Kitchens. She lives in Meadville, Pennsylvania, where she teaches writing and drama and runs a coffeehouse performance series.
Adam Czerniawski was born 1934 in Warsaw. Left Poland in 1941. Lives in England. Recent publications in English include The Mature Laurel (an edition of essays on Polish Poetry) and Scenes from a Disturbed Childhood (a memoir). His Poezje zebrane (Collected poems) appeared in Poland in 1993.
Karl Miller was literary editor of the Spectator and of the New Statesman, and then editor of the Listener. He founded the London Review of Books in 1979 and edited it for 13 years. For several years he was Lord Northcliffe Professor of Modern English Literature at University College, London.
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magazine list
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