Alison Brackenbury’s latest collection, Singing in
the Dark, has recently been published by Carcanet.
Marianne Burton’s pamphlet The Devil’s Cut
(Smiths Knoll, 2007) was a PBS choice. She won first
prize in the 2006 Mslexia competition.
Ellen Cranitch’s poems have appeared in Goldfish,
an anthology of writing from Goldsmiths College.
Fred D’aguiar’s An English Sampler: New and
Selected Poems was published by Chatto in 2001. He
lives in the US and teaches at Virginia Tech.
Rhian Gallagher’s first collection is Salt Water
Creek (Enitharmon, 2003). She lived in London before
returning to New Zealand in 2005.
Eamon Grennan’s most recent collections are The
Quick of It (Gallery, 2004) and Out of Breath (Gallery,
2007). He teaches at Columbia and New York University.
Vona Groarke has published four collections, the
most recent being Juniper Street (Gallery, 2006). She
teaches at the University of Manchester.
John Kinsella’s Shades of the Sublime and Beautiful
is forthcoming from Picador. His Disclosed Poetics:
Beyond Landscape and Lyricism (Manchester UP) was
published in 2007.
Gregory Leadbetter’s pamphlet The Body in the
Well was published by HappenStance in 2007. He is
completing a PhD on Coleridge.
Tim Liardet has published five collections. His most
recent, The Blood Choir (Seren, 2006), was a PBS
Recommendation and shortlisted for the TS Eliot Prize.
He teaches at Bath Spa University.
Bill Manhire was born in Invercargill, New Zealand.
His most recent collection is Lifted (Carcanet, 2007).
Collected Poems appeared in 2001. He teaches at Victoria
University of Wellington.
Kathryn Maris’s first collection is The Book of Jobs
(Four Way Books, 2006). She teaches at Morley College.
Michael Murphy’s next collection, Allotments, will
be published by Shoestring later this year. Proust and
America (Liverpool UP) appeared in 2007. He teaches at
Nottingham Trent University.
Tony Roberts has published two collections,
Flowers of the Hudson Bay (Peterloo, 2001) and Sitters
(Arc, 2002).
Andrew Sant is an Australian poet currently living in
London. Tremors: New and Selected Poems appeared in
2004. A new collection, Speed and Other Liberties, is
forthcoming from Salt.
Catherine Smith’s two collections are The Butcher’s
Hands (Smith/Doorstop, 2003) and Lip (Smith/Doorstop,
2007). She teaches creative writing at Sussex University.
Gerard Smyth has published six collections, the
most recent being A New Tenancy (Dedalus, 2004) and
The Mirror Tent (Dedalus, 2007).
Julian Stannard has published two collections,
Rina’s War (Peterloo, 2001) and The Red Zone (Peterloo,
2007). He teaches at the University of Winchester.
John Hartley Williams’ most recent collection is
Blues (Cape, 2004). He is currently poet-in-residence at
the Wordsworth Trust.
Dawn Wood’s first collection, Quarry, will be
published by Templar this year. She lectures in science at
the University of Abertay, Dundee.
Adam Wyeth was born in Sussex and lives in Ireland.
His poems have appeared in several magazines.
Samantha Wynne-Rhydderch is from New Quay
in Wales. Her first collection is Rock Climbing in Silk
(Seren, 2001). Her second, Not in These Shoes, will be
published by Picador in June.
Page(s) 23
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