Anne Brooke lives in Surrey with a long-
suffering husband and a rather colourful
teapot collection. She enjoys writing fiction
and poetry, and, last year, was shortlisted
for the Asham Award.
Jessica Burton’s conscious life started
when, at 16, the film American Beauty
made her look up existentialism in the
dictionary. Her work is gradually being
printed and her goal is to become the first
female British poet laureate.
Andrew Copeman – Essex. Likes:
Countryside, Coast, 6TS Garage-Punk,
Texas, Tammy Wynette, Elfin girls in
stockings and heels, Zazen, Aikido, Cats,
Trees. Dislikes: The ‘Brit’ Prefix,
Contemporary Conceptual Art, The
Bourgeoisie, Bullshitters, Snow Patrol, BNP,
The Poetry Society, The Arts Council.
Retired at sixty after twenty three years
teaching, Malcolm Currie believes that
other things besides mankind have voices
that deserve to be heard. He finds people
a constant source of fascination, despair
and hope.
Martin Edwards lives in Wimborne and
works in Bournemouth. His poems have
been published in London Magazine,
Stand, The Rialto, The North and other
places. His pamphlet Coconut Heart was
published by Redbeck Press.
Caroline Fahy read Social Science and
Administration at Goldsmiths College,
University of London. She is a freelance
English Tutor and has recently trained as a
yoga teacher. She is guided and inspired by
the Universal Truth.
David M Garnett won a poetry
competition in the mid-eighties (leading to
a broadcast by BBC Radio Leeds). He has
been published in various magazines and in
a Forward Press ‘Spotlight Poets’ presentation
and has poems appearing in The Coffee
House and The Weyfarers shortly.
Anne-Marie Glasheen is better known as
a literary translator. However her poems
have been published in Belgium, Ireland
and Luxembourg and appeared in Equinox,
Second Light, Orbis and Pentagraph
Press. She is a regular performer at
Peckham library and has exhibited her
poems and photographs there.
Nicola C Grant grew up in Kent
surrounded by a veritable menagerie of
beasts. She adores roast parsnips,
Aubergine Parmigiana, and rabbits (though
not to eat!). Her poems ‘Toad Patrol’, ‘Slug
Poem I’ and ‘Slug Poem II’ are published in
the Sept/Oct issue of The New Writer.
Nell Grey has been an artist most of her
life, exhibiting with both national societies
and local ones in Sussex where she lives.
She has written five novels, two of which,
Solitary Pleasures and The Golden Web,
have been published, and has a passion for
archaic mystery, myth and legend.
Benjamin Keating’s first pamphlet of
poems, Intimations, was published in 2003
by Kenyon College, Ohio (USA), where he
received a BA in English Literature. After
half a year in London, he now works as an
assistant teacher at an elementary school in
Boston, USA.
A poet of international acclaim, Anise
Koltz was born in 1928 in Luxembourg.
She was the founder and organiser of
Journées Littéraires de Mondorf (1962-74),
a convention of authors and poets, set up
to establish ties between the Luxembourg
and international literary scene.
Julia Lewis has had poetry published in PN
Review, Urthona, Poetry London and
Magma, and has studied with The Poetry
School for a number of years. She won first
prize in the Poetry London competition
2004. She lives in London in a Buddhist
women’s community, and works as a
secretary.
Mary Michaels has been widely published
in magazines and anthologies, most
recently in Desperado Poetry: Contemporary
British Verse (University of Bucharest,
2004). Her collection The Shape of the
Rock: New and Selected Poems (2003) is
available from Sea Cow Press.
Originally from Margate, Katrina Naomi
lives in London and works for a human
rights organisation. She studies poetry at the
City Lit with Julia Casterton and has had
work published in various magazines and
performed on London’s Resonance FM.
Kenneth Pobo’s book, Introductions, is
available from Pearl’s Book ‘Em Press. His
poems will be appearing in: Blue Unicorn,
The Shore, Chiron Review and Drexel
Online Journal. He and his partner just got
a house together.
Lizzie Whyman is a 26 year old who lives
in Newcastle. She’s had work accepted by
The Reader, Mslexia, Peace and Freedom
Press and others and is Poetry Editor for
Newcastle Stuff – a tongue-in-cheek free
magazine ‘for people who can read’.
suffering husband and a rather colourful
teapot collection. She enjoys writing fiction
and poetry, and, last year, was shortlisted
for the Asham Award.
Jessica Burton’s conscious life started
when, at 16, the film American Beauty
made her look up existentialism in the
dictionary. Her work is gradually being
printed and her goal is to become the first
female British poet laureate.
Andrew Copeman – Essex. Likes:
Countryside, Coast, 6TS Garage-Punk,
Texas, Tammy Wynette, Elfin girls in
stockings and heels, Zazen, Aikido, Cats,
Trees. Dislikes: The ‘Brit’ Prefix,
Contemporary Conceptual Art, The
Bourgeoisie, Bullshitters, Snow Patrol, BNP,
The Poetry Society, The Arts Council.
Retired at sixty after twenty three years
teaching, Malcolm Currie believes that
other things besides mankind have voices
that deserve to be heard. He finds people
a constant source of fascination, despair
and hope.
Martin Edwards lives in Wimborne and
works in Bournemouth. His poems have
been published in London Magazine,
Stand, The Rialto, The North and other
places. His pamphlet Coconut Heart was
published by Redbeck Press.
Caroline Fahy read Social Science and
Administration at Goldsmiths College,
University of London. She is a freelance
English Tutor and has recently trained as a
yoga teacher. She is guided and inspired by
the Universal Truth.
David M Garnett won a poetry
competition in the mid-eighties (leading to
a broadcast by BBC Radio Leeds). He has
been published in various magazines and in
a Forward Press ‘Spotlight Poets’ presentation
and has poems appearing in The Coffee
House and The Weyfarers shortly.
Anne-Marie Glasheen is better known as
a literary translator. However her poems
have been published in Belgium, Ireland
and Luxembourg and appeared in Equinox,
Second Light, Orbis and Pentagraph
Press. She is a regular performer at
Peckham library and has exhibited her
poems and photographs there.
Nicola C Grant grew up in Kent
surrounded by a veritable menagerie of
beasts. She adores roast parsnips,
Aubergine Parmigiana, and rabbits (though
not to eat!). Her poems ‘Toad Patrol’, ‘Slug
Poem I’ and ‘Slug Poem II’ are published in
the Sept/Oct issue of The New Writer.
Nell Grey has been an artist most of her
life, exhibiting with both national societies
and local ones in Sussex where she lives.
She has written five novels, two of which,
Solitary Pleasures and The Golden Web,
have been published, and has a passion for
archaic mystery, myth and legend.
Benjamin Keating’s first pamphlet of
poems, Intimations, was published in 2003
by Kenyon College, Ohio (USA), where he
received a BA in English Literature. After
half a year in London, he now works as an
assistant teacher at an elementary school in
Boston, USA.
A poet of international acclaim, Anise
Koltz was born in 1928 in Luxembourg.
She was the founder and organiser of
Journées Littéraires de Mondorf (1962-74),
a convention of authors and poets, set up
to establish ties between the Luxembourg
and international literary scene.
Julia Lewis has had poetry published in PN
Review, Urthona, Poetry London and
Magma, and has studied with The Poetry
School for a number of years. She won first
prize in the Poetry London competition
2004. She lives in London in a Buddhist
women’s community, and works as a
secretary.
Mary Michaels has been widely published
in magazines and anthologies, most
recently in Desperado Poetry: Contemporary
British Verse (University of Bucharest,
2004). Her collection The Shape of the
Rock: New and Selected Poems (2003) is
available from Sea Cow Press.
Originally from Margate, Katrina Naomi
lives in London and works for a human
rights organisation. She studies poetry at the
City Lit with Julia Casterton and has had
work published in various magazines and
performed on London’s Resonance FM.
Kenneth Pobo’s book, Introductions, is
available from Pearl’s Book ‘Em Press. His
poems will be appearing in: Blue Unicorn,
The Shore, Chiron Review and Drexel
Online Journal. He and his partner just got
a house together.
Lizzie Whyman is a 26 year old who lives
in Newcastle. She’s had work accepted by
The Reader, Mslexia, Peace and Freedom
Press and others and is Poetry Editor for
Newcastle Stuff – a tongue-in-cheek free
magazine ‘for people who can read’.
Page(s) 38-39
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