Five

Author:   Ann and Peter Sansom ,  Laura Potts ,  Prerana Kumar ,  Ruth Yates
Publisher:   Smith|Doorstop Books
ISBN:  

9781914914782


Publication Date:   01 August 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Five


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Overview

A groundbreaking anthology of new work from five varied and distinctive poets. All five poets are alumni of The Writing Squad, a community of artists who make new work together and support each other’s development. Their free two-year programme of workshops and 1-1 support has helped to develop over 270 writers aged 16-22 since 2001.

Full Product Details

Author:   Ann and Peter Sansom ,  Laura Potts ,  Prerana Kumar ,  Ruth Yates
Publisher:   Smith|Doorstop Books
Imprint:   Smith|Doorstop Books
Dimensions:   Width: 14.80cm , Height: 0.50cm , Length: 21.00cm
Weight:   0.090kg
ISBN:  

9781914914782


ISBN 10:   1914914783
Publication Date:   01 August 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Laura Potts is a poet and writer of radio drama from West Yorkshire. Laura began to write poetry at an early age, winning The Foyle Young Poets Award twice during her school days. While at university, she moved to Swansea to work at The Dylan Thomas Birthplace and write for The Dylan Thomas Society. Her work has appeared in Agenda, The Moth, The Poetry Business Book of New Poets, Aesthetica and Poetry Ireland Review in recent years. In 2017, as one of the BBC's New Voices, she was commissioned to write radio drama for BBC Radio 3. Her first production, North and Mourning, featured the voice of Carnegie-Medal winner Berlie Doherty and was broadcast on The Christmas Verb. Laura has been the recipient of awards including The Foyle Young Poets Award, The Bristol Poetry Prize and The Mother's Milk Writing Prize. She received a commendation from The Poetry Society in 2018. Her most recent commissions have been for BBC Radio, The International Anthony Burgess Foundation and The King's Chapel in London. Laura was shortlisted for The Edward Thomas Fellowship, The Bridport Prize and The Rebecca Swift Women's Poetry Prize in 2020. She was a finalist for The Manchester Poetry Prize in 2021. Prerana Kumar is an Indian poet who has recently completed an MA in Creative Writing at UEA. She has also completed an MA in Twentieth and Twenty-First Century Literature from Durham University with a focus on South-Asian poetics. She was recently digital poet-in-residence for The Poetry Business and has been shortlisted for Nine Arches Press’ Primers scheme and The White Review Poet’s Prize 2022. She has been published in Magma, Barren, and Ink Sweat & Tears. She writes about how identity hinges on home, language, memory, desire, and the tenuousness of intergenerational inheritance First. Ruth Yates lives in Sheffield. Four times winner of the Foyle Young Poets Award, her poems have been shortlisted for the Eric Gregory Award and Disabled Poets Prize; highly commended in the Resurgence Poetry Prize; and commended in the Verve Poetry Festival Competition. Her poems have appeared in Cadaverine, Route 57, Mslexia Writing Squad booklet, Carmen et Error, Pennine Platform and The North, and in anthologies including Introduction X: The Poetry Business Book of New Poets and Like Flyering for the Revolution: The Verve Anthology of Protest. She was commissioned to produce work for Manchester Festival of Libraries in 2021, in collaboration with creative technologist Chris Ball, The Writing Squad, and Future Everything; and has collaborated in online projects including 'A Diary of Windows and Small Things' and 'Staying Home'. Helen Bowell is a poet, producer, editor, critic, writer (you name it) currently based in London. Her debut pamphlet The Barman is published with Bad Betty Press and traces a relationship with an unnamed barman backwards through time. Along with fellow Squad writer Jasmine Simms and artist Lily Arnold, she is a co-director of Dead [Women] Poets Society, a live literature organisation which 'resurrects’ women poets of the past, currently on an Arts Council England funded national tour. In this role, she co-guest-edited the Autumn 2020 Modern Poetry in Translation focusing on dead women poets. Helen is a Ledbury Poetry Critic, and an alumna of the London Library Emerging Writers Programme, London Writers Awards, and the Roundhouse Poetry Collective. She was a commended Foyle Young Poet in 2010 and 2011. In 2020, she won the Bronze Creative Future Writers’ Award and in 2021 was commended in the Mslexia Poetry Competition. She was Poetry Business’s digital Poet in Residence February 2021. Her poems have appeared in bath magg, Poetry Birmingham, The Willowherb Review, harana poetry, Ambit, The Fenland Reed, Strix, Manchester Review, Introduction X: The Poetry Business Book of New Poets (2017) and elsewhere. She works at The Poetry Society. Her current projects include working on a series of poems queering Arthurian legend, and figuring out how to incorporate theoretical physics into her practice. Eva Lewis is a poet, writer, and co-runner of SINK Magazine. They are an editor for Young Identity, a submissions reader at The Selkie, and member of the Queer Bodies Poetry Collective. They have written for multiple literary publications including Broken Sleep Books, Aster Lit, A Velvet Giant, Ice Floe Press, among others, and have performed for Amnesty International. They are currently working on a chapbook to come out with Broken Sleep Books, as well as several other projects, from collaborations to interdisciplinary works, exploring intersections between body, language and environment; with reference to queer identity, the social model of disability, neurodivergence, emotional inheritance and abuse. Eva is based in Manchester, and when they aren’t reading, writing or running a magazine, you can either find them dissociating, procrastinating, or in the used books section of Oxfam.

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