Candlestick Press

Biographies

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.

  • Elaine Feeney

    Elaine Feeney is an Irish poet originally from Galway who now lives in Athenry. Her collections Where’s Katie? (2010), The Radio was Gospel (2014) and Rise (2017) are published by Salmon. Her chapbook, Indiscipline, appeared from Maverick Press in 2007. Feeney’s work has been translated into over a dozen languages and is widely published.

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  • Elaine Feinstein

    Elaine Feinstein is a poet, playwright, fiction writer, biographer and translator. Her poetry collections include Collected Poems and Translations (2002), Talking To The Dead (2007) and Cities (2010). Her novels often draw on her own Jewish heritage and she has  written several biographies, including biographies of Ted Hughes and Anna Akhmatova.

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  • Mark Fiddes

    Mark Fiddes has written two poetry books: The Rainbow Factory and The Chelsea Flower Show Massacre. His work is widely anthologised and published in poetry magazines. He works as a creative director between London, Barcelona and the Middle East.  He was once an altar boy who did several Christmases.

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  • Eugene Field

    Eugene Field (1850 – 1895) was an American writer, best known for his children’s poetry and humorous essays. It was in 1888 with the publication of his poem ‘Little Boy Blue’ in a weekly journal called America that he won lasting fame. During this period Field also published With Trumpet and Drum (1892) and Love-Songs of Childhood (1894).

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  • Martin Figura

    Martin Figura was born in Liverpool and now lives in Norwich. He is a poet, teacher and photographer. His book Whistle (Arrowhead Press, 2010) is a long autobiographical poem which was turned into a show and subsequently shortlisted for the Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry. In 2016 he published Dr Zeeman’s Catastrophe Machine with Cinnamon Press and the pamphlet Shed with Gatehouse Press.

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  • Anne Finch

    The poetry of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea (1661 – 1720), which earned a degree of attention during her lifetime, became better known after her death. While Finch also authored fables and plays, today she is best known for her poetry. After her death, critics recognised the diversity of her poetic output as well as its personal and intimate style. She was appointed a maid of honour to Mary of Modena in the court of Charles 11 and went on to marry Colonel Heneage Finch, who subsequently became the fifth Earl of Winchilsea.

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