Marion Bailey lives in Croydon and is a former Classics and careers teacher. She published The Chance of a Lifetime, the history of a charity, in 1996.
Marlo Bester recently relocated from San Francisco to London. Currently she is anxiously awaiting her escape from office to graduate school. This is her first publication.
David Boll writes full time and has published a novel. He lives in London.
Sarah Brown is a freelance writer/editor.
Robert Cousins is a born and bred Croydonian, is at school in Croydon and leaves Croydon as often as possible. He likes to visit the tops of mountains or, failing that, the local pub.
Matthew Charles Davis is 17 and at school in Croydon. He is studying Art, English, French and Philosophy and plays in a band. He wants to run a restaurant and marry an accountant.
Mick Delap lives in Greenwich. With Irish roots, he was brought up in Hampshire. He has spent over 20 years working for the BBC World Service.
Carrie Etter is reading for a Master of Fine Arts degree at the University of California at Irvine. Her poems have appeared in various American magazines and are forthcoming in Poetry Wales, the Anthology of Magazine Verse and Yearbook of American Poetry.
K. Fletcher lives in Tipton in the Black Country and has had poems in Envoi, Frogmore Papers, People to People, Iota, the Rialto, Smiths Knoll, Scratch and Writing Women.
Ronald Frank cultivates his garden in Surrey and is a compulsive traveller to remote places, hunting small plants on large mountains.
E. P. Guest is a qualified translator (French-English). Poems in various anthologies.
Selima Hill has won several awards for her work including first prize in the Anion/Observer competition in 1988. Her poetry books include Saying Hello at the Station (1985), My Darling Camel (1988), The Accumulation of Small Acts of Kindness (1989), all published by Chatto; and A Little Book of Meat (1993) and The Trembling Hearts in the Bodies of Dogs (1994) by Bloodaxe.
Tim Kindberg was born in Nottingham in 1958. Previously published in Magma, Tandem and Navis. He lectures and designs software for collaboration over the Internet.
Thomas Kretz lives and writes in Italy.
V. G. Lee lives in London and appeared at the 1996 Stoke Newington Festival.
Richard Livermore was at Edinburgh University and has lived in Spain. Currently a cleaner in an Edinburgh school. Two collections of poems published with a third due in the autumn.
Mary Macrae lives in south London and teaches in Dulwich.
Branko Manojlovic is 27, was born in Belgrade and is a BA student of English literature at Birkbeck. Poems in Verse and Ambit.
Clare Pollard is an A level student in Bolton. She was one of Poetry Review’s New Poets of ‘96 and has had poems published in Rialto and The Wide Skirt.
Simon Rees-Roberts trained as a painter and worked as a scenic artist and prop-maker before becoming an art teacher, currently at a comprehensive school in north-west London.
Martin Sonenberg has a PhD on Proust from King’s College, London. He has lectured and researched in Paris and now teaches at the University of Westminster. Poems and illustrations in Litmus, Magma and Greenwich Anthology. Currently writing a screenplay.
Laurie Smith chairs a poetry workshop at the City Lit.
John Stammers lives in lslington where he was born. He works part-time as a Civil Servant and writes.
Geoff Stevens has edited Purple Patch since 1976 and been UK editor of the US literary magazine, S-Fest Ltd, since 1995. His poems have been widely published in Europe, India, Japan, Australasia and the Americas - 250 poems in 1996 alone.
Stephen Thorne has left the factories and is now a mature student at Birmingham University, reading English.
Philip Wells is a stage poet who has performed at numerous venues including The Groucho Club, Westminster Abbey, Jermyn Street Theatre and The Hogshead Alehouse. He has two collections published by Dragonheart Press on a leading Internet poetry website.
Page(s) 59-61
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