Patricia Ace graduated with distinction from Glasgow University's MLitt in Creative Writing in December 2008. She currently has six poems in the anthology Booklight from Knucker Press and is working towards a first full collection.
William Baer, a recent Guggenheim fellow, is the author of fifteen books, including "Bocage" and Other Sonnets; The Ballad Rode into Town; Luís de Camões: Selected Sonnets; Writing Metrical Poetry; and Classic American Films: Conversations with the Screenwriters. He’s also the past recipient of a creative writing fellowship from the National Endowment of the Arts, the T.S. Eliot Poetry Award, and a Fulbright in Portugal.
Carole Bromley teaches Creative Writing for York University. Poems in many magazines and two pamphlets ('Unscheduled Halt' and 'Skylight') from Smith/Doorstop.
Luigi Coppola is an English teacher in London, trying to impart as much enjoyment of literature, and especially poetry, to his classes as possible. Currently working towards a first collection after graduating in English & Creative Writing from Warwick University.
Angela Croft appears in the current issue of Lighten up on Line and has had poems in South Bank Poetry, Iota, Genius Floored and Wavelengths; and accepted for forthcoming issues of Other Poetry and Equinox.
Liz Dean is a London-based writer and editor. Her published work includes four books on tarot cards, and poems in Magma and South Bank Poetry magazines.
Nancy Gaffield grew up in the US and lived in Japan and Egypt before settling in Canterbury. She recently completed her MA in Creative Writing at the University of Kent, where she was awarded the University’s TS Eliot Poetry Prize (2009) by Marilyn Hacker. She was long-listed as Canterbury Festival Poet (2009) and is now seeking to publish her first full-length collection, Tokaido Road.
Diana Gittins is an associate lecturer in creative writing for the Open University and has published a poetry pamphlet, Dance of the Sheet (Odyssey), and four works of nonfiction. Her most recent publication was in Tears in the Fence and she was shortlisted in the 2009 Cinnamon Poetry Pamphlet competition.
Mandy Haggith is a writer and environmental activist who lives on a woodland croft in Assynt, in the northwest Highlands of Scotland. She has two published poetry collections: letting light in (Essence Press, 2005) and Castings (Two Ravens Press, 2007). Thanks to a Scottish Arts Council writer’s bursary, she will spend much of the next year using Assynt’s many ruined stone buildings as triggers for poetry and fiction.
Richard W. Halperin is widely published in journals in Ireland and the U.K. He has completed two poetry collections, both to be be published by Salmon Poetry Limited: Anniversary (2010) and The Crepuscular Theory
of Light (2012).
Caroline Natzler's first collection, Design Fault, was published by Flambard Press in 2001. Her second, Smart Dust, appeared from Grenadine Press in 2009.
Jeremy Page lives in Lewes, East Sussex. He has published two pamphlets and one full collection (The Alternative Version, 2001) and a new pamphlet is due in April from HappenStance Press.
D.A.Prince lives in Leicestershire and London. Her first full-length collection, Nearly the Happy Hour, was published by HappenStance Press in 2008.
Myra Schneider's tenth collection of poetry, Circling The Core, was published by Enitharmon (2008) and her other recent publication is Writing Your Self, a key resource book of personal writing and literature (co-authored with John Killick (Continuum Books 2009). She is a core tutor for The Poetry School and consultant to the Second Light Network of women poets.
Bridget Thomasin has lived in the same valley on Dartmoor for the last twenty eight years. The weather and landscape of her surroundings is a deep influence on her writing and visual work.
Peter Weltner's books include Beachside Entries/Specific Ghosts (prose poems/short shorts, Five Fingers Press), From a Lost Faust Book (poetry chapbook, Finishing Line Press) and News from the World at My Birth (poems, Standing Stone Press). His poems have recently appeared in Vitruvius Journal, Paradigm Journal, Ampersand, and Clapboard House. He lives in the outerlands of San Francisco, California, close to the Pacific.
Jessica Kilburn (artwork) was born in Newcastle upon Tyne, and now lives in London, working as a freelance writer and illustrator. She read English at Merton College, Oxford, and History of Art at the University of Glasgow. She especially admires the illustrations of the contemporary artists, Mark Hearld and Emily Sutton, and the illustrated columns of Maira Kalman ('And the Pursuit of Happiness') which appear in The New York Times.
Page(s) 28-30
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