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Tag: how to write a poem

Michelle Diaz: How I Wrote ‘The fridge’

Posted on July 6, 2022April 30, 2024

Interview by Zoë Brigley I never consciously use repetition in my work, but I have noticed I have started to use this technique a little more in recent poems. The muse has chosen it, it seems! The fridge The fridge put his tongue in my mouth at a party when I was twelve years old. The…

Cliff Forshaw: How I Wrote ‘RE:VERB’

Posted on June 29, 2022April 30, 2024

I wanted the freedom to move between different forms: couplet, sonnet, quatrain, ballad, but my Rimbaud always speaks in verse, no matter how loose Several years ago I had a residency in France and, in between drinking wine and weekends being a flâneur in Paris, spent my time translating French poets. I worked my way through the…

Rose Rouse: How I Wrote ‘Notes on the Lure’

Posted on June 22, 2022April 30, 2024

Interview by Zoë Brigley “I think poetry and prose… provide important ways of breaking into those taboos such as sex and death when it comes to older people“ Notes on the Lure We squat beneath a black umbrella in Morfa Bychan as the much younger pair strip off, naked amid the pelt and fury of drip…

Hollie McNish: How I Wrote ‘an apology and a warning to my local bookshops’

Posted on June 18, 2022April 30, 2024

Photo credit: Helmi Okbara | Interview by Zoë Brigley Hollie McNish, author of Slug (available in paperback from all good bookshops now) discusses her poem written in celebration of Independent Bookshop Week (18-25 June) an apology and a warning to my local bookshops almost every week a family member sends me a photograph of my book in a local bookshop…

Matthew Smith: How I Wrote ‘As if this is a Dreamscape’

Posted on June 15, 2022April 30, 2024

Interview by Peter Molnar [Content warning for trypanophobia/fear of needles] A punchy, intriguing ending can hold me in its thrall as a reader                 As if this is a Dreamscape Lantis Insulin Driver, 7:43am. A needle pricked to skin’s breaking, the driver clicking, a cold burn streaking, seeping through this strip of fatty tissue. Cold…

Kate Noakes: How I Wrote ‘Hair’s Breadth’

Posted on May 25, 2022April 30, 2024

Interview by Zoë Brigley There are many poems concerned with other breath related topics from different cultures and geographies. This is one such.  Hair’s breadth I The child watches a pair of hares chase around the paddock by the holiday cottage. Rime has whitened grass and gorse in every field from there to the edge…

Rhys Owain Williams: How I Wrote ‘Mother and Child’

Posted on May 11, 2022April 30, 2024

Interview by Zoë Brigley I think I write poetry by ear too, writing and rewriting lines repeatedly until they sound ‘right’ when I read them aloud Mother and Child Josef Herman, oil on canvas, c. 1945–50 Unhappy days for you, now, are few – yet this dull lunchtime seems to hang. On your iPad, you…

John Greening: How I Wrote ‘Sea Urchins’

Posted on May 4, 2022April 30, 2024

Photo credit: Adrian Bullers | Interview by Zoë Brigley The Roman poet Horace was right to recommend holding back your work for several years before publishing it. You get a better sense of its value… Sea Urchins Cape Ann, Massachusetts We have trampled those delicate eggs of the night, the sea urchins, fragments of a…

Introducing Our New Reviews Editor: George Sandifer-Smith, How I Wrote ‘Sandwich inspector’

Posted on April 27, 2022April 30, 2024

Poetry Wales is delighted to announce the appointment of our new Reviews Editor, George Sandifer-Smith. By way of introduction, George explains the process behind writing his poem ‘Sandwich inspector’ as well as his hopes and plans for reviews… Sandwich inspector Lunchtime is vital. Waft of delivered bread slowing into crouton fodder two aisles away as…

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