ISSUE
8 (2004)
[212pp. ISBN 09530674-7-5. £7.50]
Contents: Articles
Jeremy
Hooker, ‘From “Upstate: a North American Journal”’
Fiona
Owen, ‘This Even Frailer Flesh’
Glyn
Pursglove, ‘“Taught him at the well”: Reflections
on “Isaac’s Marriage’
Alan
Rudrum, ‘Narrative, Typology and Politics in Henry Vaughan’s
“Isaac’s Marriage”’
Michael
Srigley, ‘Flowers in Rich Fields: The Poetry of Thomas Vaughan’s
Pamphlets’
Contents: Poetry
Gary
Allen, ‘New Year’
Ruth
Bidgood, ‘Patricio 2001’, ‘Pattern’
Lucy
Calcott, ‘Maundy Thursday’.
Tony
Connor, ‘Haymaking’
Clare
Crossman, ‘Writing Back’
Pat
Earnshaw, ‘Everyone a Stranger’
Kate
Foley, ‘Wellington Boots’
Richard
George, ‘Reliving the Calendar’
Daphne
Gloag, ‘Turning the Square into an Octagon’
Graham
Hartill, ‘Winged Heads’
Vicki
Holmes, ‘The Visitor’
Jeremy
Hooker, ‘Towards Elsinore’
Phil
Maillard, ‘The Press of Silence. A Walk to Patricio’
Christine
McNeill, ‘Expedition’
Angela
Morton, ‘Traces’
Gréagóir
Ó Dúill, ‘Tideline’
William
Oxley, ‘Memory, Snowflakes’
Simon
Pettifar, ‘To the Clerk of the Meetings when the Sufis Came
to Speak to Us’; Laughing Poem’; ‘Incense’
Jay
Ramsay, ‘The Boreen’
Mercer
Simpson, ‘At Malmesbury Abbey’
Kim
Taplin, ‘A Road to Dover’
Chris
Torrance, ‘PATH/Finder’
Edwina
Trentham, ‘Calling My Father By Name’
John
Powell Ward, ‘The Last Green Year’
John
Welch, ‘Turning’; ‘Daybreak’; ‘Family’
Merryn
Williams, ‘After Mandelstam’
Rowan
Williams, ‘Invocation: a Sculpture for Winter’
Dilys
Wood, ‘Singularity’
Lynne
Wycherley, ‘Fragments of Iraqi Calligraphy’
Open
Poetry Competition, Short Poems:
James Harpur, ‘The Monastic
Star Timetable’ (1st Prize)
Jemma Borg, ‘The Pond’
(2nd Prize)
Brett Van Toen, ‘Bullfrogs’
(3rd Prize)
Commended:
Helen Burke, ‘The Lace-workers
of Ghent’
Rose Flint, ‘Grace’
Mary MacRae, ‘Flycatcher’
John Weston, ‘To Alaska
and Back’
Samantha Wynne-Rydderch, ‘Lipstick’
Open
Poetry Competition, Long Poems:
Alyson Hallett, ‘The
Storm Trilogy’ (1st Prize)
Myra Schneider, ‘Orpheus
in the Underground’ (2nd Prize)
M.C. Newton, ‘Beliefs
Broad and Narrow’ (3rd Prize)
Commended:
James Harpur, ‘Joseph
of Arimathea’
Greg Hill, ‘Myddleton’s
River’
Mary MacRae, ‘Shades
of Grey’
Philip Rush, ‘How to
Listen to Classical Music’
Maria Jastrzebska, ‘Carrying
Her’
Visual Art
Issue 8 features images from wood engravings by Colin
See-Paynton (inc. cover art).
Contributors
GARY
ALLEN was born in Ballymena, Co. Antrim. Included in Breaking
the skin – 21st century poetry from Ireland, and The
backyards of heaven – contemporary poetry from Ireland, Newfoundland,
and Labrador. Latest collection Languages (Flambard/Black
Mountain).
RUTH
BIDGOOD lives in mid-Wales. Her most recent collection is
Singing to Wolves (Seren, 2000). Her New and Selected
Poems is due from Seren in 2004.
JEMMA
BORG has a PhD in genetics and works as a science editor.
She has had poems in Magma and poems forthcoming in the Agenda
broadsheets for promising young poets.
HELEN
BURKE, is widely published in magazines such as Rialto,
New Welsh Review, Northwards, Raindog, Kindred
Spirit, Poetry Nottingham, Dreamcatcher and many
others. Her new collection Back of Beyond comes out in September.
LUCY
CALCOTT lives in Eastbourne, Sussex. She has had poems published
in Resurgence and Agenda and contributed to a recent
anthology, Earth songs. She has three young children and
works part-time in the local hospice.
TONY
CONNOR’s first five volumes of poetry were published
by OUP. Since then, three more volumes have been published by Anvil
Press Poetry. The latest isMatamorphic Adventures, 1996.
CLARE
CROSSMAN lives near Cambridge, with her husband. She has
published two books of poetry, Landscapes (Redbeck Press),
Going Back (Firewater Press Cambridge), and a series of ten
poetry lithographs and accompanying pamphlet of that sequence. Silent
Reading. (Pharos Press).
PAT
EARNSHAW, a biology graduate, has published four books of
poetry, and a pamphlet, The Golden Hinde (Redbeck 2002).
In June 2002 she was awarded a SouthEast Arts Council grant towards
work on a collection.
ROSE
FLINT is an artist and writer. She works as both a creative
writing tutor and an art therapist; she is currently Lead Writer
for the Kingfisher Project in Salisbury Hospital, using poetry in
a variety of healthcare settings. Her first collection is Blue
Horse of Morning (Seren), and her second and third collections
are Firesigns (Poetry Salzburg) and Nekyia (Stride).
KATE
FOLEY’s third collection, Laughter from the Hive,
will be published by Shoestring Press in spring 2004. She worked
in archaeology/ conservation but now lives in Amsterdam and is about
to begin studies for a PhD in creative writing.
RICHARD
GEORGE read Classics at Oxford before being visited by the
Muses in 1996. Both his parents were geography teachers, giving
him an eye landscape (not least that of the mind).
DAPHNE
GLOAG read Classics and Philosophy at Oxford but worked mainly
as a medical journalist and editor. Many of her poems have appeared
in magazines etc; Diversities of Silence (Brentham Press)
was published in 1995. She won first prize in the 2001 Poetry on
the Lake competition in Italy.
ALYSON
HALLETT’s book of short stories, The Heart’s
Elliptical Orbit, was published this July by Solidus Press.
She is currently writing a new body of poems about the migration
habits of stone, a project funded by The Arts Council, England.
JAMES
HARPUR was winner of the 1995 National Poetry Competition.
He has had three books published by Anvil, including his latest,
Oracle Bones, an exploration of prophecy, divination and
inspiration. He is currently writing a short history of Christian
mysticism.
GRAHAM
HARTILL’s book of ‘transcription poems’,
Life-lines,was published in 2003 by the Ledbury Poetry Festival.
Cennau’s Bell, his selected poems, is out this year
from the Collective Press.
GREG
HILL edited the Anglo-Welsh Review and regularly contributes
both verse and criticism to literary journals in Wales and beyond.
He is Head of Humanities at Coleg Ceredigion in Aberystwyth.
VIKI
HOLMES lives and writes in Cardiff. Her poetry appears in
Pterodactyl’s Wing: Welsh World Poetry, and her first
collection, Miss Moon’s Class and the Interrelatedness
of Things, will be published in 2004.
JEREMY
HOOKER’s most recent collection of poems is Adamah
(Enitharmon Press), 2002). His Welsh Journal appeared from
Seren in 2001. He is Professor of English at the University of Glamorgan.
MARIA
JASTRZEBSKA, author of: Postcards from Poland (Working
Press), Home From Home (Flarestack 2002), co-edited Forum
Polek. Published most recently in Ambit, The Rialto,
Smiths Knoll and One Heart One World exhibition.
MARY
MACRAE has had poems published in various anthologies and
magazines including Magma, Scintilla, Staple,
Other Poetry, The Interpreter’s House and The
Rialto. She is included in the Poetry School anthology, Entering
the Tapestry, in Making Worlds and in the forthcoming
anthology of women’s writing from Second Light. She lives
in London.
PHIL
MAILLARD, born in London in 1948, has lived (mostly) in South
Wales since 1975. He currently works in Cardiff as an NHS speech
therapist. He has published five poetry collections and a paperback
of stories.
CHRISTINE
McNEILL has had one collection published by Bloodaxe and
a translation of Rilke’s poem-cycle on the Life of the
Virgin Mary by Dedalus Press. She works as a language tutor
in adult education.
ANGELA
MORTON lives near Brecon. Her first poetry collection, The
holding-ground, was published by the Collective Press, Abergavenny,
in 2002. Key interests include the natural world, alchemy, shamanism
and healing.
M.
C. NEWTON recently moved from Devon to North Wales, where
she hopes to carry on writing and publishing verse.
GRÉAGÓIR
Ó DÚILL is executive director of the Poet’s
House, Falcarragh, Co. Donegal, Ireland. With a substantial body
of work in Irish (eight collections and his selected verse, anthologies
and prose) he recently writes mainly in English.
FIONA
OWEN has two collections of poetry published, Imagining
the Full Hundred (Gwasg Pantycelyn, 2003) and O My Swan
(Flarestack, 2003). She teaches for the Open University and Open
College of the Arts, and lives in Ynys Môn.
WILLIAM
OXLEY was born in Manchester. A poet and philosopher, he
has read his work on UK and European radio and is the only British
poet to have read in Shangri-la in Nepal.
SIMON
PETTIFAR used to be a publisher but found himself turning
into a writer. His poems have appeared in a number of journals and
anthologies and he is also currently working on two prose collection,
Islands of the Present (non-fiction) and Tenderness among
other things (short stories).
GLYN
PURSGLOVE teaches at the Depertmant of English in the University
of Wales, Swansea. He is editor of The Swansea Review and
reviews editor of Acumen.
JAY
RAMSAY is a poet, psychospiritual therapist and NESH healer
in private practice. Project director of Chrysalis – the
poet in you, and co-founder of The Lotus Foundation. His latest
collection is his 9/11 collaboration The Message with Californian
poet Karen Eberhardt Shelton (David Paul Press, London, 2002).
ALAN
RUDRUM has published widely but not exclusively on seventeenth
century topics, principally Henry and Thomas Vaughan and John Milton.
Editor of Vaughan’s Complete Poems (Penguin Classics
1976, etc) and The Works of Thomas Vaughan (Clarendon Press,
1984). Most recent book The Broadview Anthology of Seventeenth
Century Verse and Prose, with associate editors Holly Nelson
and Joseph Black.
PHILIP
RUSH is a teacher of English in Gloucester who also plays
the electric violin. He is completing a diploma in creative writing
at Bristol University and last year walked four hundred miles to
Santiago de Compestela with his wife Caroline.
MYRA
SCHNEIDER’s most recent books are her new and selecetd
poems,. Insisting on Yellow (Enitharmon 2000) and Writing
My Way Through Cancer, a fleshed-out journal with poems (Jessica
Kingsley, 2003). Mutliplying the Moon is due from Enitharmon
later this year.
BILL
SHEPHERD. Born 1935. Retired from industry 1987. Since 1997
trained and now practices as a psychosynthesis therapist. Versions
of Horace (odes and epodes) and Propertius in Penguin Classics series.
MERCER
SIMPSON’s poetry collections are East Anglian Wordscapes
and Rain from a Clear Blue Sky. Many of his poems have appeared
in magazines and anthologies, particularly in Wales.
MICHAEL
SRIGLEY has taught for some years at Uppsala University.
He has most recently published Probe of Doubt: Scepticism and
Illusion in Shakespeare’s Plays (Uppsala, 2000) and is
interested in alchemy and Green Men in churches.
KLIN
TAPLIN’s most recent book is From Parched Creek
(Redbeck Press, 2001). She has just completed a book-length poem
called Goodfellow, the opening of which appeared in Scintilla
6.
CHRIS
TORRANCE, born Edinburgh. Scotland, 1941. Upbringing South
West London. Began writing in the 1960’s; moved to Wales in
1970. Tutored Adventures in Creative Writing for University College,
Cardiff, 1976-2001. Co-founder poetry-&-music band HEAT POETS.
EDWINA
TRENTHAM has published in a number of periodicals and anthologies,
including The Massachusetts Review, Prairie Schooner,
The American Scholar, Harvard Magazine, and Atomic
Ghost: Poets Respond to the Nuclear Age.
BRETT
VAN TOEN is living a complex life in Bethnal Green. Part
of ShadoWork an experimental performing poetry group (which includes
Mario Petrucci and Martyn Crucefix). Goes clubbing at weekends,
reflects and writes the rest of the time.
JOHN
POWELL WARD is Honorary Research Fellow at the University
of Wales, Swansea. Six collections of poetry, including The Clearing.
Welsh Arts Council Award for 1985. Former editor of Poetry Wales.
His Selected Poems appears from Seren Books
JOHN
WELCH, born in 1942, retired from his job as a schoolteacher
two years ago. A new collection of his poems will be appearing from
Shearsman in Spring 2004.
JOHN
WESTON was Britain’s Ambassador to the UN in New York
until 5 years ago. Some twenty poems accepted in the past year,
including by Guardian, Spectator and London Magazine.
A late-flowering cactus.
ROWAN
WILLIAMS, Archbishop of Canterbury, was brought up in Swansea.
He is the author of several books of theology. The Poems of Rowan
Williams, his third collection, appeared from the Perpetua Press
in 2002.
MERRYN
WILLIAMS is the editor of The Interpreter’s House
and the Wilfred Owen newsletter. She has published two collections,
The Sun’s Yellow Eye (National Poetry Foundation) and
The Latin Master’s Story (Rockingham) and translated
the Selected Poems of Lorca (Bloodaxe).
DILYS
WOOD is the Convenor of Second Light, a network of over 350
women poets, which publishes a Newsletter and also anthologies of
poetry. Hr own Collection is Women Come to a Death, Katabasis,
1997.
LYNNE
WYCHERLEY’s poetry, which often features landscape
and the spirit, has appeared widely. Her first pamphlet was published
by Acumen, and her first full collection At the Edge of Light
is published by Shoestring Press.
SAMANTHA
WYNNE-RHYDDERCH was born in Aberystwyth and grew up in south
west Wales. She now divides her time between New Quay and Oxford.
Her first book, Rockclimbing in Silk, was published in 2001.
She is currently working on a second collection.
ART WORK: COLIN SEE-PAYNTON, who
lives and works at Berriew in Powys, is regarded as one of the finest
wood-engravers working today. He creates images of great complexity
and beauty out of a fusion of a deeply-pondered virtuoso technique
with ‘personal thoughts and feelings about the natural world’,
when, as he puts it, ‘somehow a spark is … struck’.
The intricate layering and patterning of his images (he a master
of the movement of birds, fish and mammals and of the elements they
inhabit) is a revelation of the energies and interdependencies that
animate the created world. ‘He leads the eye through air and
water, weaving reality into reflection.’

Last
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04-Oct-2006
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This document is maintained by Anthony
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