Yvonne Baker's work has appeared in The New Writer, The Interpreter's House, Iota and other magazines.
R.V. Bailey hails from Northumberland. She is the other voice in poetry recordings by U.A. Fanthorpe. Her first full collection
Marking Time is now available from Peterloo Poets.
Philip Bennetta's latest publication sounds of absence was published in July this year by the Community of Poets and Artists Press.The work forms part of a large soft-sculpture/installation of the same title - awaiting a commission.
Hilary Bussey has painted in oils for most of her life. Her poems are beginning to be published in a variety of magazines.
Michael Curtis writes poetry, stories and articles. He has performed across Europe at numerous venues. His first children's book was published in the Isle of Man in June.
Barbara Daniels has six collections of poetry published: the most recent, The Cartographer Sleeps (Shoestring Press) includes
several prize-winning poems.
Barbara Dordi lives in Kent and the south of France. Her poetry has been published in magazines, anthologies and on the Internet. Her most recent collection Entre-Deux is written in English and French.
Performance poet Marilyn Donovan took advantage of voluntary redundancy to spend more time writing. She has been published in The Interpreter's House and Brittle Star.
Ann Drysdale has been a visiting lecturer at Cardiff University and
UWE Bristol. She is the author of four recent poetry collections published by Peterloo. A Landcape in Waiting, a book published last year as a result of a residency, was nominated for the Welsh Book of the Year award. Her new volume from Peterloo Between Dryden and Duffy: Another Collection was launched in autumn 2005.
Patrick Drysdale worked in Canada as teacher, lexicographer and textbook editor. His poems have been published in magazines,
and he has recently had translations published in Modern Poetry in
Translation.
U A Fanthorpe , the Queen's Gold Medal winner and one of the
nation's best loved poets, has recently published Collected Poems 1978 - 2003 which includes poems from her first collections which are now out of print.
A former Russian Translator and sometimes a TEFL teacher, Jenny Galton-Fenzi is a B&B landlady in South Devon.
Jo Heather was born in South Africa and was brought up in Devon. She took early retirement and began to write. She is on the editorial board of Mudfog who published her pamphlet Gold in 2001.
Alan M. Kent is lecturer in literature for the Open University. He is a poet, novelist and dramatist, and has several academic publications to his name. His latest books include his verse translation of the Cornish trilogy of mystery plays known as Ordinalia (2005) and a novel - Proper Job, Charlie Curnow.
Chris Hardy plays guitar in the bluesrock band Big Road. He is widely published in poetry magazines and was a prize winner in recent Poetry Society, London Writers and other competitions.
Teresa Hardy is an ex-engineer living in France who divides her
time between writing fiction, teaching English to French adults and looking after her children.
Performance poet Maggie Harris won the Guyana Prize for Literature with her first collection Limbolands. Her second collection From Berbice to Broadstairs is to be published this year.
Ione Harrison has an MA in Creative Writing and has been published in magazines and anthologies. She edits The French Literary Review and lives near Toulouse with her husband and two children .
Hazell Hills runs writing workshops at Compton Verney Art Gallery, and had poems published in a variety of magazines.
Robin McConnell is a New Zealand poet who has been published internationally (six books). His collection, nothing is as physical
as a poem (Pohutukawa Press), with a foreword by Janet Frame, has sold out.
Eliza Mood is a lecturer in English Language and Creative Writing
in Lancaster. Her debut novel Giving up Architecture is published by Seaglass Books.
William Oxley is a poet and philosopher who has been published worldwide. In 2004, Hearing Eye published Namaste his Nepal
poems, and Bluechrome published his London Visions in 2005. A study of his poetry, The Romantic Imagination came out in 2005 from Poetry Salzburg.
Hubert Moore has published five collections, three from Enitharmon and the most recent from Shoestring. His pamphlet, Beautifully kept things, was a winner in the Poetry Business Competition, 2003. The Hearing Room, his sixth full collection, is due from Shoestring Press this year.
Caroline Natzler's first collection Design Fault was published by Flambard Press in 2001.
Felicity Perera is working on a first collection. She lives with her
husband and three young children near Bristol.
W. H. Petty lives in Kent where he was Chief Education Officer for many years. His poems have been widely published and successful in a number of national competitions. His latest collection Hijacked over China with Jane Austen was published this year.
Jacqueline Saphra's plays have been widely performed and her
poetry has been published in magazines including Acumen, Staple, Orbis and Envoy.
Sue Rose is a translator in the fields of travel and the arts. Her
poems have appeared in magazines and anthologies and she is a founder member of Scatterlings, a trio of poets performing in the Southeast.
Daphne Schiller gained an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia and has published poems, stories and articles.
Kate Scott's first collection Stitches, was published by Peterloo Poets. Her poetry has been broadcast on BBC radio 4 and in the U.S..
Ted Walter has been teaching Creative Writing for 30 years. His new collection Promptings of St. Thomas's is due out in the autumn.
Christine West lives in a pottery village in Central France.
She belongs to the writers' group, Lumineuse, is working on her first novel and on a collection of poems.
Hilary Williams lives on the edge of Dartmoor where she enjoys reading and writing poetry and prose.
Merryn Williams is the author of two collections; a third will be published by Shoestring this year.She edits The Interpreter's House magazine.
Sarah Williams is a member of the Kent and Sussex Poetry Society. She has published poetry in Orbis, Obsessed with Pipe Work and Magma.
Philip Woodrow co-ordinates Thanet's Own Poets and is member of the Kent and Sussex Poetry Society.
Linda Yeaton has published four collections with Anne Miniver
Press, her fifth is due out in the autumn.
R.V. Bailey hails from Northumberland. She is the other voice in poetry recordings by U.A. Fanthorpe. Her first full collection
Marking Time is now available from Peterloo Poets.
Philip Bennetta's latest publication sounds of absence was published in July this year by the Community of Poets and Artists Press.The work forms part of a large soft-sculpture/installation of the same title - awaiting a commission.
Hilary Bussey has painted in oils for most of her life. Her poems are beginning to be published in a variety of magazines.
Michael Curtis writes poetry, stories and articles. He has performed across Europe at numerous venues. His first children's book was published in the Isle of Man in June.
Barbara Daniels has six collections of poetry published: the most recent, The Cartographer Sleeps (Shoestring Press) includes
several prize-winning poems.
Barbara Dordi lives in Kent and the south of France. Her poetry has been published in magazines, anthologies and on the Internet. Her most recent collection Entre-Deux is written in English and French.
Performance poet Marilyn Donovan took advantage of voluntary redundancy to spend more time writing. She has been published in The Interpreter's House and Brittle Star.
Ann Drysdale has been a visiting lecturer at Cardiff University and
UWE Bristol. She is the author of four recent poetry collections published by Peterloo. A Landcape in Waiting, a book published last year as a result of a residency, was nominated for the Welsh Book of the Year award. Her new volume from Peterloo Between Dryden and Duffy: Another Collection was launched in autumn 2005.
Patrick Drysdale worked in Canada as teacher, lexicographer and textbook editor. His poems have been published in magazines,
and he has recently had translations published in Modern Poetry in
Translation.
U A Fanthorpe , the Queen's Gold Medal winner and one of the
nation's best loved poets, has recently published Collected Poems 1978 - 2003 which includes poems from her first collections which are now out of print.
A former Russian Translator and sometimes a TEFL teacher, Jenny Galton-Fenzi is a B&B landlady in South Devon.
Jo Heather was born in South Africa and was brought up in Devon. She took early retirement and began to write. She is on the editorial board of Mudfog who published her pamphlet Gold in 2001.
Alan M. Kent is lecturer in literature for the Open University. He is a poet, novelist and dramatist, and has several academic publications to his name. His latest books include his verse translation of the Cornish trilogy of mystery plays known as Ordinalia (2005) and a novel - Proper Job, Charlie Curnow.
Chris Hardy plays guitar in the bluesrock band Big Road. He is widely published in poetry magazines and was a prize winner in recent Poetry Society, London Writers and other competitions.
Teresa Hardy is an ex-engineer living in France who divides her
time between writing fiction, teaching English to French adults and looking after her children.
Performance poet Maggie Harris won the Guyana Prize for Literature with her first collection Limbolands. Her second collection From Berbice to Broadstairs is to be published this year.
Ione Harrison has an MA in Creative Writing and has been published in magazines and anthologies. She edits The French Literary Review and lives near Toulouse with her husband and two children .
Hazell Hills runs writing workshops at Compton Verney Art Gallery, and had poems published in a variety of magazines.
Robin McConnell is a New Zealand poet who has been published internationally (six books). His collection, nothing is as physical
as a poem (Pohutukawa Press), with a foreword by Janet Frame, has sold out.
Eliza Mood is a lecturer in English Language and Creative Writing
in Lancaster. Her debut novel Giving up Architecture is published by Seaglass Books.
William Oxley is a poet and philosopher who has been published worldwide. In 2004, Hearing Eye published Namaste his Nepal
poems, and Bluechrome published his London Visions in 2005. A study of his poetry, The Romantic Imagination came out in 2005 from Poetry Salzburg.
Hubert Moore has published five collections, three from Enitharmon and the most recent from Shoestring. His pamphlet, Beautifully kept things, was a winner in the Poetry Business Competition, 2003. The Hearing Room, his sixth full collection, is due from Shoestring Press this year.
Caroline Natzler's first collection Design Fault was published by Flambard Press in 2001.
Felicity Perera is working on a first collection. She lives with her
husband and three young children near Bristol.
W. H. Petty lives in Kent where he was Chief Education Officer for many years. His poems have been widely published and successful in a number of national competitions. His latest collection Hijacked over China with Jane Austen was published this year.
Jacqueline Saphra's plays have been widely performed and her
poetry has been published in magazines including Acumen, Staple, Orbis and Envoy.
Sue Rose is a translator in the fields of travel and the arts. Her
poems have appeared in magazines and anthologies and she is a founder member of Scatterlings, a trio of poets performing in the Southeast.
Daphne Schiller gained an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia and has published poems, stories and articles.
Kate Scott's first collection Stitches, was published by Peterloo Poets. Her poetry has been broadcast on BBC radio 4 and in the U.S..
Ted Walter has been teaching Creative Writing for 30 years. His new collection Promptings of St. Thomas's is due out in the autumn.
Christine West lives in a pottery village in Central France.
She belongs to the writers' group, Lumineuse, is working on her first novel and on a collection of poems.
Hilary Williams lives on the edge of Dartmoor where she enjoys reading and writing poetry and prose.
Merryn Williams is the author of two collections; a third will be published by Shoestring this year.She edits The Interpreter's House magazine.
Sarah Williams is a member of the Kent and Sussex Poetry Society. She has published poetry in Orbis, Obsessed with Pipe Work and Magma.
Philip Woodrow co-ordinates Thanet's Own Poets and is member of the Kent and Sussex Poetry Society.
Linda Yeaton has published four collections with Anne Miniver
Press, her fifth is due out in the autumn.
Page(s) 53-54
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