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Caroline Smith and the poetry book 'that needed to be written'

“I thought this was a book that needed to be written – and that I was in a unique position to write it.” Caroline Smith is the wife of Labour MP Barry Gardiner, and has worked for him in his Brent North constituency office on immigration and asylum cases for a number of years.

She is also a poet, and earlier this year published The Immigration Handbook, a collection of stories of cases that are...

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Review

Umbrellas of Edinburgh anthology, Freight Books

The title of this anthology is either a comment on the weather or, with its echoes of ‘Les Parapluies de Cherbourg’, a veiled nod to “the Auld Alliance”. This landmark anthology contains the work of 70 writers who either live in Edinburgh or have connections with it. The editorial brief to the write...

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Review

'Every night I tell her about the fish who died for her'

We've been selecting poems for this column for more than ten years and I can't remember ever publishing a poem about a cat. But here at last is a cat, a lovely old cat. Ron Koertge lives in California...

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American Life in Poetry

Discovering Urdu poet Ghalib and his ghazals

There’s a chance to learn about the renowned Urdu poet Ghalib on Thursday 1 December at the Centre for the Study of Pakistan at SOAS, University of London, at Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square. Noveli...

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News

100 Prized Poems: 25 years of the Forward Books, Faber

Twenty-five years ago the first Forward prizes were awarded, going to Thom Gunn (best collection), Simon Armitage (most promising young poet), and Jackie Kay (best single poem). In 1992, as Forward pr...

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Review

Centres of Cataclysm, 50 years of Modern Poetry in Translation, Bloodaxe

Modern Poetry in Translation was founded by Ted Hughes and Daniel Weissbort, went into a splendid second incarnation under David and Helen Constantine, and now continues to flourish edited by Sasha Du...

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Review

'Take me to tokyo where the lights may blind me' by Stuart Buck is Write Out Loud Poem of the Week

The new Write Out Loud Poem of the Week is ‘take me to tokyo where the lights may blind me’ by Stuart Buck, a regular contributor to Write Out Loud. In a quick Q&A Stuart said his principal poetic inf...

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Poem of the week

Kate Tempest on shortlist for £5,000 Costa poetry award

Kate Tempest’s Let Them Eat Chaos, which is both an album and a book of verse, has been shortlisted for the £5,000 Costa poetry award. Let Them Eat Chaos is a long narrative poem that Tempest recently...

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News

Bang Said The Gun plans nationwide tour next year

The uproarious poetry night Bang Said The Gun is embarking on a national tour in 2017. The popular spoken word event – think poetry plus party games - which was established by co-founders Dan Cockrill...

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News

Hilariously terrible? So bad it's brilliant? Contestants line up for anti-slam national final

Contestants from all over the country are lining up to take part in the national final of the Anti-Slam Championships next month. Anti-Slam? Some of the top spoken word artists in the UK will be doing...

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News

Omens and hope in showcase of poetry's young stars at the Troubadour

A wealth of young poetic talent was on show at the Troubadour in London on Monday night in an evening curated by 2016 Eric Gregory award winner Dom Bury, a member of the Coffee-House Poetry team at th...

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Review

What It's Like To Be Alive: Deryn Rees-Jones, Seren

Deryn Rees-Jones is professor of poetry at Liverpool University. After her first degree in English at the University of Wales, Bangor, she completed a PhD in contemporary women’s poetry at Birkbeck Co...

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Review

Leonard Cohen, songwriter, poet and novelist, dies aged 82

The singer-songwriter, poet and novelist Leonard Cohen has died aged 82. The news was announced via his official Facebook page, which said a memorial would be held in Los Angeles at a later date.

C...

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News

Write Out Loud Woking at the New Inn tonight

Write Out Loud Woking meets at the New Inn, Send in Surrey on Monday 21 November for another night of free, open-mic poetry. Your hosts are Greg Freeman and Rodney Wood. Arrive from 7.30pm for 8pm sta...

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News

Poetry's man of mystery Brian Bilston reveals (nearly) all to Write Out Loud

At a recent poetry event Write Out Loud came face to face with the man behind poetry’s “man of mystery” Brian Bilston, whose fans include plumbers and police officers, dancers and dentists, and people...

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Interview

New batch of poetry performers are featured in latest Nationwide TV ads

A fresh batch of spoken word performers are featured in the latest TV adverts by Nationwide Building Society on subjects like house-sharing while yearning to own your own home. Poems by Laurie Bolger,...

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News

MUMB: Cathy Crabb, Flapjack Press

One of civilisation’s best-kept secrets is that the Perfect Parent does not exist, although countless manuals, self-help guides, and people who enjoy occupying moral high grounds would have you believ...

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Review

'London Victoria' by Travis Brow is Write Out Loud Poem of the Week

The new Write Out Loud Poem of the Week is ‘London Victoria’ by Travis Brow, a tale of unrequited love. The poem has been praised by Write Out Loud regulars like Harry O’Neill, for its “lovely rhymed ...

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Poem of the week

Deadline nears for £2,000 Causley prize

The former poet laureate Sir Andrew Motion will be judging poems shortlisted for the £2,000 Charles Causley international poetry prize, set up in memory of the Cornish poet. Motion said “‘I’m looking ...

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Competitions

Rosie Wilkinson takes helm at Write Out Loud Marsden tonight

Young local poet Rosie Wilkinson, pictured, is taking over as co-ordinator at Write Out Loud Marsden, the regular open-floor night that meets at Marsden library on the third Wednesday of each month.

...

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News

Pamphlets by Kuli Kohli, Jeff Phelps, Bo Crowder: Offa's Press

Offa’s Press has scored a hat trick - three publications from Kuli Kohli, Jeff Phelps and Bo Crowder that all deserve applause.

Kuli Kohli was born in Uttar Pradesh, India, but has lived in England...

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Review

Write Out Loud at Bolton Socialist Club tonight

Write Out Loud returns for another night of open mic poetry at Bolton Socialist Club on Tuesday 15 November. Your hosts are Jeff Dawson (Jeffarama!) and Gordon Zola. Entry is £1 plus raffle, and doors...

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News

Laura Taylor at Write Out Loud Sale tonight

Fiery performance poet Laura Taylor will be a guest at Write Out Loud Sale on Tuesday 15 November at the Waterside arts centre, Sale, ahead of her big gig next month supporting Attila the Stockbroker ...

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News

Write Out Loud at Stockport art gallery tonight

Write Out Loud Stockport will be meeting at Stockport art gallery on Monday 14 November for another open-floor evening of sharing poems. Entry is a £1 donation, and it starts at 7pm. Each month the gr...

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News

Remembrance night of anti-war poetry and music in Bolton

A Remembrance poetry and music night will be held at Bolton Little Theatre on Saturday 12 November when Bard CompanyJeff Dawson, Ian Whiteley, Gordon Zola and Tony Kinsella -  will perform When Wil...

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News

Poetry in the Outer Hebrides: Stornowords in Lewis moves to new home

An open mic poetry night in the Outer Hebrides is having a “housewarming” at its new venue on Saturday night, 12 November. Stornowords, which showcases established and local poets as well as holding a...

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News

Lesley Saunders wins Stephen Spender prize for translation

Lesley Saunders has won the 2016 Stephen Spender prize for translation for Poem by Maria Teresa Horta, translated from the Portuguese. Writing in the Guardian, one of the judges, Sean O’Brien, describ...

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News

Poets team up with clinical psychologists at mental health conference

Performance poets Dean Atta, pictured, and Yomi Sode will be taking part in a conference aimed at bringing together the worlds of poetry and clinical psychology in a new approach towards global mental...

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News

Write Out Loud Wigan at the Old Courts tonight

Expect the unexpected at Write Out Loud Wigan, the inimitable open mic poetry night that meets at the Old Courts, Wigan tonight, Thursday 10 November. Entry is free, and it begins at 8.30pm. More deta...

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News

'The windshield the anvil, the trike the hammer, the marriage the forge'

Garrison Keillor has used a number of George Bilgere's poems on The Writer's Almanac, and I've used several in this column, and it seems neither of us can get quite enough of this writer's clear, hone...

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American Life in Poetry

The Way the Crocodile Taught Me: Katrina Naomi, Seren

Crikey pepper as my grandad used to say (a child-friendly version of Christ Almighty, I believe) – what a story. Katrina Naomi tells us about her fraught childhood and adolescence in a tumble of brill...

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Review

'Let America be America again, Let it be the dream it used to be'

Poetry is invoked as a rallying call in the US presidential election today as, in an eve-of-poll New York Times article, Harry Belafonte writes: “What do we have to lose? Everything.”

He starts by ...

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News

Anatomy of a prize-winning poem: how Abigail Parry won the Troubadour

What does it take to win a £5,000 international poetry competition?  Judges Glyn Maxwell and Jane Yeh have offered up a few clues in their comments on Abigail Parry’s poem ‘Pasodoble With Lizards’, wh...

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News

Making a living as a poet: (1) ironing out some image problems

Poets could sharpen up their act, perform in more audience-friendly locations, rather than the upstairs rooms of pubs, and even make sure they iron their trousers if they want to earn more respect – a...

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News

Deadline nears for £1,000 Cafe Writers competition

Andrew McMillan will be judging the £1,000 Café Writers poetry competition. The deadline is 30 November. More details

 

PHOTOGRAPH: INNES MORRISON 

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Competitions

'I can't Stop' by Claire is Write Out Loud's Poem of the Week

The new Write Out Loud Poem of the Week is ‘I Can’t Stop’, by Claire. It’s a poem that celebrates an overflowing sense of creativity, even if “nobody can hear me”. She goes on to to say that she needs...

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Poem of the week

Sunshine: Melissa Lee-Houghton, Penned in the Margins

There’s a received wisdom in modern poetry that says that you use as few words as possible to say as much as possible; a kind of austerity of the word. Every word has to earn its place in the line, ha...

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Review

November poetry in Aldeburgh after all with weekend of events in town

A three-day poetry event that was organised by volunteers after this year’s Aldeburgh poetry festival was scrapped because of lack of funds got under way on Friday 4 November.

Poetry in Aldeburgh w...

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News

Another stab at the charts? Roger McGough teams up with Little Machine

Back in the 1960s he hit no 1 with Liverpool pop group The Scaffold. Now Roger McGough, Mersey poet and presenter of BBC’s Poetry Please, has teamed up with poetry band Little Machine to record 12 of...

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News

The public and the personal: reasons why Laura Taylor looks back in anger

Laura Taylor is angry … you can tell that from her T-shirt.  But where does her anger come from? You can find more than a few clues in her poem ‘Dear Margaret’, written shortly after the death of form...

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Review

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