Wales Poetry Award, a national competition to discover the very best international contemporary poetry Update 15.05.2023: Winners Announced! Wales Poetry Award 2022 closed for entries in January 2023, and the shortlist and winners were announced in May 2023 Wales Poetry Award 2023 will be open for submissions in September 2023, exact dates TBC. Follow our…
Author: Frances Turpin
After Dickinson and Disability
Poetry Wales are delighted to announce an online panel at the Tell It Slant Poetry Festival To celebrate the launch of our disability-themed Summer 2022 issue, Poetry Wales Editor Zoë Brigley hosts a panel of poets from the issue alongside Dickinson critic Michael Davidson. While some readings of Dickinson’s poetics focus negatively on her potential…
Jane Burn: How I Wrote ‘Translation / Acts’
An essay by Jane Burn “Choosing the form for a poem is a process built from endless negotiations” Note: Due to the formatting style of this poem, we have had to embed it as an image rather than as text as we usually do. To read a plain text version, please see this file: On…
Gareth Writer-Davies: How I Wrote ‘A Voyage Round The Moon’
Interview by Zoë Brigley I wanted to emphasise the tradition of voyaging of slipping over the horizon to end up God-knows-where and white space was important for adding drama A Voyage Round The Moon After John Gohorry and as the voices crackled then died the craft disappeared on the far side all contact lost the…
Kostya Tsolakis: How I wrote ‘Marble bf’
Interview by Zoë Brigley I kept thinking of the block of marble – tall and narrow, I imagined – the Charioteer of Motya was carved out of… My voice, its pace, was then guided by this tall and narrow form Marble Bf But a Greek would never think of a charioteer like this. – Historian…
Amanda Rackstraw: How I Wrote ‘Rewrite’
I can be an editing bully. I believe in making words know why they are there. Rewrite In the script he sees his mother age with dignity. There’s a slowing down; then he finds her, elegant, wisdom pooling in her eyes. _____ A mollusc hauls itself across the ward, catheter swinging from Zimmer, chicken feet…
Jonaki Ray: How I Wrote ‘Moonshine’
Interview by Zoë Brigley I enjoy the challenge of writing something in such a concise and precise manner because it makes me attempt to fine-tune my thoughts. Moonshine At the Goa and Karnataka border, India Liquor, bootlegged across the river, is what this village was once famous for, but now, alcohol is a banished word,…
Julie Irigaray: How I Wrote ‘GROWING UP IN A GARRISON TOWN’
Interview by Zoë Brigley I felt this poem had to work rhythmically, like the steps in a military march. GROWING UP IN A GARRISON TOWN I never notice the bursts of gunfire on the other side of the river the shops selling military outfits the university library’s 19th century cannons stored between each reading room…
Patrick Jones: How I Wrote ‘THIS GUITAR SILENCES FASCISTS’
Photo credit::Lucy Purrington | Interview by Zoë Brigley I don’t think of my work as having a song-like structure, as to me poetry is more free and I believe you can craft a poem in any way you like… I like to follow the inner voice and see where it leads THIS GUITAR SILENCES FASCISTS…