Exhibitions & Collaborations
Catalogue: Among the Garbage and the Flowers : Advocate Habitat, text and photography booklet, exhibited by Le 6B Paris, with Rupert Stuart-Smith, curated by Anya Gleizer, The Flute & the Bowl, 2021.
Poetry
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Poet's Choice, "Longing" pub date TBC
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Be Still Media Competition, "My great grandfather remembers his service in war when a US archeological sub scans the Atlantic for the remains of a P-47 aircraft from 1944" (Shortlisted in the 1 Mar - 16 Apr 2022)
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Crank, "Inferno" and "Facetime in E-den"
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Passengers Journal, "A still-life in bitter herbs, salt, parsley, lamb and korech"
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eris & eros, "Liquid Architecture"
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The Napkin Poetry Review, "ALL IS SOFT INSIDE," "The Departure," "Mao's vision opens at the sight of the two children," from Selah Arcadia, and "I did not read the book of myths," a response to Adrienne Rich's poem Diving into the Wreck.
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"a mother's goodbye" was published by the Sentinel Literary Quarterly, after being awarded second place in the Sentinel Literary Quarterly Poetry Competition (May 2019) by welsh comedian, writer, screenwriter, film-director and historian, Terence Graham Parry Jones.
This is a lovely villanelle; skilful and sensitive in its handling of the tercets and the quatrain and the repeating lines and rhymes, and it is (in good part) this move to engage a demanding form in the service of a serious, richly geological and deeply human imagination that justifies the poems ranking in this competition. In five tercets and a concluding quatrain, operating within the tight constraints of the rhyme scheme, the poems nevertheless succeeds in opening into real historical and topographical space. 'a mother’s goodbye' achieves to a musical and evocative re-creation of a land, a landscape (the slieve bloom mountains), and – with impressive economy and eloquence – a way of life and a history. From the opening lines of the poem we are left in no doubt that the poet can imbue language with charm and charge. The whole imaginative engagement that is the poem is sustained and executed with balance and grace. - Terry Jones
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SaveAS Poetry, "the four moons of a harvest,"The judges report, written by Gillian Laker of 2019 Canterbury Festival Poet of the year: "An extremely accomplished and original poem that mixes musical notation with the quartered moon. Controlled and expertly-structured, this work is shape-shifting and sonorous. The down-stroke of the bow. There is grief at the base of each quarter, but a grief that has such a rich and strong connection to the living, natural world, that it allows no turning away, even from the harshest of images." The final phrase is concerned with the solace of memory, a compendium of precious and brilliant fragments. ​
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Prose
The Oxford Review of Books, "In Haedeki" was shortlisted for the Oxford Review of Book's Hilary 2020 Fiction Competition, judged by award-winning novelist Will Eaves. The short story reflects on relationships, responsibility, rejection, loneliness and loss, highlights the outscape of inevitable change, and considers the progression or power and erosion in times of profound eco-consciousness.
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Reviews
Claire Crowther’s fourth collection Solar Cruise, a Poetry Book Society Recommendation for Spring 2020, is a deeply moving and introspective memoir, which documents the relationship between herself, a poet, and her husband physicist. Her linguistic choices––pneumonic rhetoric, metaphors and similes––demonstrate the value of researching and making strides to combat the adverse effects of climate change. In Solar Cruise, Crowther examines the language of science closely and discovers the poetry hidden underneath.
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Eléna Rivera’s riveting collection of long poems, Epic Series, swims out into the complexities of identity, questioning what it means to be and become, to belong simultaneously to oneself and to one’s generational tree.
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Award-winning poet and memoirist John Greening brings us on a pilgrimage to the site of a historical, seventeenth-century spiritual community in his poem, The Giddings. His narrator is contemplative, almost restless, in his encounter with the nature. ‘Walking there, he hears the trees addressing him;’ the oak, sycamore, sweet chestnut, and pine beckon him closer to the panorama of a steeple where one man – Nicholas Ferrar – and a chorus of psalm-children wait beside a pyre of books on fire.
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how to spear sleep. Award-winning poet Nathan Shepherdson guides us atomically through the universe (the entirety of matter and space) where one man – Romanian-born German-language poet and translator Paul Celan – weighs the depth and demand of his relationship with poetry and familial love. Unable to settle on an order of importance, Celan explores the tensions that arise between his roles as poet, husband, and father. Based on conversations between du Bouchet and Celan’s wife Gisèle Celan-Lestrange and son Eric Celan, how to spear sleep dissects Celan’s biblical hallucination; akin to Abraham, he must choose between Poetry and son.
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