Rack Press ever impresses – Poetry Review
The consistently reliable Rack PressTimes Literary Supplement
I have come to hope that a Rack Press pamphlet may be a tiny gift-box of unusually good poems – Alison Brackenbury, PN Review
Rack Press has the courage to be brief and elegant – The Rialto

Sunday 18 November 2012

Autumn Poetry in Clerkenwell 20th November


We are getting very excited about next week's Autumn Poetry Reading in Clerkenwell: 

Rack Press and Invited Poets.

The poets reading will be:

Martina Evans  
Nicholas Murray  
Cliff Forshaw 
Róisín Tierney   
Luke Heeley   
Liz Berry

Venue: The Horseshoe, 24 Clerkenwell Close, Clerkenwell, London EC1R 0AG.
Time 7pm.   Entrance:  Freeb
Directions: CLICK HERE.

Martina Evans is a poet and novelist. Her collection Facing the Public (2009) was a TLS Book of the Year and received the Piero Ciampi International Poetry Prize in 2011. Rack Press brought out her pamphlet Oh Bart earlier this year.  A book-length prose poem, Petrol was recipient of a Grants for the Arts Award and was published by Anvil Press in September 2012.

Nicholas Murray’s most recent collection is Acapulco: New and Selected Poems  (Melos) and he runs the Welsh poetry pamphlet imprint Rack Press which was shortlisted this year for the Michael Marks Award for poetry pamphlet publisher of the year.  His previous collections include Get Real!  a verse satire on the coalition Government and The Narrators – both from Rack Press.

Cliff Forshaw lives in Hull where he teaches at the university. His collections include Trans (Collective Press, Wales, 2005), and the chapbooks Wake (Flarestack, 2010) and Tiger (HappenStance, 2011); Vandemonian, is due from Arc in 2012. He has held residencies in Romania, Tasmania and California, twice been a Hawthornden Writing Fellow, and won the Welsh Academi John Tripp Award. He is also a painter and film-maker.

Róisín Tierney  is an Irish poet based in London.  She read as part of the Poetry Ireland Introduction Series in June 2008.  Her work has won many prizes and is published in several  pamphlets, the most recent being  The Art of Wiring (Ondt & Gracehoper, 2011) and Dream Endings (Rack Press, 2011).   Her first solo publication, Dream Endings (Rack Press), won this year’s  Michael Marks Pamphlet Award.

Luke Heeley grew up in Lincolnshire and now lives in south London. The winner of an Eric Gregory Award, his work has appeared in The Times Literary Supplement, The Wolf, The Rialto and the anthologies Ask for It by Name, The Art of Wiring and Psycho Poetica. He also won the 2011 Crashaw Prize for Poetry.  His debut collection Dust Sheet is due from from Salt Publishing in December.

Liz Berry was born in the Black Country and now lives in London where she works as an infant school teacher. She received an Eric Gregory Award in 2009 and her pamphlet The Patron Saint of Schoolgirls was published as the winner of the Tall-Lighthouse prize in 2010. Liz won first prize in this year’s Poetry London Competition. www.lizberrypoetry.co.uk

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