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Biographies
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Here you can find out more about the huge range of poets we feature in our pamphlets and the artists whose work appears on our beautiful covers.
We’ve now published poems by almost 800 historical and contemporary poets. In our pages you’ll find old favourites alongside twenty-first century voices – everyone from WH Auden to Benjamin Zephaniah. Although our emphasis is on British poetry, you’ll also find Irish, American and Australian writers.
We hope these pages will encourage you to explore further the work of a poet you’ve enjoyed in one of our pamphlets.
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Nancy Campbell
Nancy Campbell (b. 1978, UK) has conducted residencies at ecological and research institutions in Iceland, Denmark and the US, and is a Hawthornden Fellow. Her books include The Night Hunter (2011), Tikilluarit (2013) and How To Say ‘I Love You’ In Greenlandic (2011), which received the Birgit Skiöld Award; her translations from Greenlandic have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize.
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Niall Campbell
Niall Campbell is a Scottish poet originally from South Uist in the Western Isles. His first collection Moontide was published by Bloodaxe and won the inaugural Edwin Morgan Poetry Prize (2014). He has also published a US collection First Nights as part of the Princeton Series of Contemporary Poets. He is now living in Leeds and working on a second UK collection.
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Moya Cannon
Moya Cannon was born in 1956 in County Donegal and has published five volumes of poetry, including most recently Keats Lives (Carcanet, 2015). Her poems, which have been widely anthologised and translated, engage with landscape, archaeology, music and language itself. She has won the Brendan Behan and O’Shaughnessy Awards and has held numerous residencies in Ireland and abroad.
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Sam Cannon
Sam Cannon is a wildlife artist with a background in graphic design, based near Lyme Regis in Dorset. She creates images of the natural world, often incorporating phrases or quotations from poems in beautiful calligraphy. Her paintings of native birds and mammals are always meticulously observed but also convey the vivid, secret lives of these familiar creatures.
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Gladys Cardiff
Gladys Cardiff is a member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee and grew up in Seattle, Washington. She has published several poetry collections, the first of which was To Frighten a Storm (Copper Canyon Press, 1976) and her work has been widely anthologised. She teaches at Oakland University in Michigan.
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Thomas Carew
Thomas Carew (1595 – 1640) was a poet in the court of Charles I. His early work is indebted to Donne and Jonson but he also foreshadows the lighter, more elegant style of the ‘Cavalier’ poetry that came afterwards. His reputation really took off in the 1620s with the publication of his scandalous erotic poem ‘A Rapture’ which was even condemned in the House of Commons.
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