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"Totally Thames" Festival Programme Announced

Totally Thames’ fantastic annual season of over 100 events celebrating the River Thames is back for the month of September. This year’s programme will look at the river as an inspiration and source of creativity connecting London to other cities around the world. It will also celebrate the heritage of our river and illuminate the long-standing traditions and unique stories the river holds.

Tota...

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Poetry Events

Creativity in the Fight Against Climate Change

As someone who spends a lot of time immersing soul and senses in the forest, convinced that our symbiotic relationship with trees extends beyond the dynamics of oxygen and carbon dioxide to something more spiritual, I was delighted to stumble across the recently established Bind Collective.

This ...

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Poetry in the Natural World

Reconciliation by Ray Pool is Write Out Loud's Poem of the Week

This week’s Write Out Loud Poem of the Week is Reconciliation by Ray Pool.  This is the third time Ray's work has been selected as Poet of the Week, so many congratulations to him once again.  Ray is ...

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Poem of the week

Ten: Poets of the New Generation, ed. by Karen McCarthy Woolf, Bloodaxe

This is the third in a series of anthologies - the first  was published in 2010 - which were intended to correct a perceived imbalance in the publishing of poets of black and minority ethnic (BAME) or...

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Review

There's Always Time For Some Ogden Nash

Emotion carries weight much like a tackle box but unlike a tackle box, it should not be reserved solely for the good times. There are so many events that happen in people’s lives to write poetry about...

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Poetry Reflections

Bare Fiction Boost for Low Income Writers

Bare Fiction, a print magazine that publishes and promotes new writing in poetry, fiction, short stories and theatre, put out a call via an email newsletter, Facebook and Twitter for low income writer...

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Poetry Competitions

Modern Times; Don't decry Manchester students' Actions

This week we saw a widely reported news story in the UK about students at Manchester University who defaced a mural on their campus displaying Rudyard Kipling’s The White Man’s Burden.  The poem, they...

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Editorial

Pearls of Wisdom from one of our Poet Laureates

Emily Galvin is the Staffordshire Poet Laureate.  After bumping into her at a recent event where I was able to hear her perform some of her work I took the opportunity to grab a quick interview about ...

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Editor's Interviews

Last call for Foyle Young Poets Award entries

“For me poetry isn’t about ‘understanding’ it’s about experiencing, like a dream, or a movie played on the inside of your eyelids.” – Caroline Bird (pictured), Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award Winn...

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Poetry Competitions

Poets: Voices of Prophecy and Custodians of Truth

Poetry is often the voice of courage, found in every generation, a voice which often exposes the truth and challenges the times in which we live.  It can also be the voice of prophecy which has as its...

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Poetry Reflections

Ledbury 2018: A review

The Ledbury Poetry Festival takes place over ten days each July (29th June – 8th July in 2018) and has long been a key event in the poetry world. Now in its 22nd year, Ledbury is the UK's largest poet...

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Poetry review

Our Poem of the Week is ‘Purpose is defeated’ by Kporho Vwede Daniel

This week, we’ve chosen Purpose is Defeated, by Kphoro Vwede Daniel from Warri, in the Delta state of Nigeria. His poem holds a mirror up to the political situation in his country, and his answers to ...

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Poem of the week

Way More Than Luck: Ben Wilkinson, Seren

I found Ben Wilkinson’s work, as represented in this collection from Seren, direct but nuanced.  The poems are well crafted in a range of forms. The three sections of the book have distinct themes. Th...

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Review

Omphalos: A Return to the Source of Poetry

Omphalos: A Return to the Source of Poetry

‘I would begin with the Greek word, omphalos, meaning the navel, and hence the stone that marked the centre of the world, and repeat it, omphalos, omphalo...

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Poetry Reflections

Please don't apologise: Swear!

Swearing, profanity, expletive or just plain crude, does the risk of causing offence outweigh the literary effect a writer or performer can achieve by using a rude word?  Parental Warnings aside, shou...

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Editorial

Are You Content with Write Out Loud's Content?

Write Out Loud has a long tradition of bringing more people to poetry through offering a superb selection of resources, information exchange and platform for on-line publishing, reading and discussion...

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Write Out Loud

Feeling the Buzz: Hive City Legacy at The Roundhouse

Nine fierce femmes of colour fill the stage for 75 minutes of physical performance mixing spoken word, song, dance, circus skills.  It’s cleverly paced, telling a story of integration of a single lone...

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Poetry review

Addressing The Poetry Periphery

A lack of diversity in British poetry remains a conspicuous issue. In 2016 almost 10% of poets published by a major press in the UK were black or Asian. This has risen from the 2005 figure, where only...

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Diversity in Poetry

Competing For Audience Attention: Is Poetry Enough?

Why do people go to poetry events?  Or, perhaps more pertinent in the light of some of my recent experiences might be the question; Why don’t people go to poetry events?  Thankfully the success of man...

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Editorial

The English River: Virginia Astley, Bloodaxe

I came across Virginia Astley way back in 1983 with the release of her first solo album From Gardens Where We Feel Secure - an almost entirely instrumental piece that fused ambient sound recordings of...

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Review

‘Bye bye blackbird’ by Ray Pool is Write Out Loud’s Poem of the Week

With his poem Bye Bye Blackbird,  Write Out Loud regular Ray Pool finds himself awarded the accolade of Poem of the Week for the second time. Members of our team met up at a Walthamstow tea-room, ate ...

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Poem of the week

War Girls: Women Poets of the First World War

Ruth Sillers’ moving performance of women’s poetry written in the First World War has been touring the country for the last four years, and as the actress considers moving on to new projects there may...

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Poetry Performance

Aesthetica Creative Writing Award Open For Entries

If the recent article on Write Out Loud from our Contributing Editor Patrick Wright about entering poetry competitions has kick-started your competitive nature, why not take a look at the Aesthetica M...

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Poetry Competitions

A Gamble Worth Taking: Entering Poetry Competitions

‘If you don’t buy a ticket, you don’t win the lottery’, so the saying goes. And the same can be said of entering poetry competitions. To get anywhere in the poetry world, such as looking to win the Ma...

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Poetry Competitions

May Days inspired by Shelley's Masque of Anarchy

May Days is a physical adaptation directed by Simone Vause of the poem of the same name by William Alderson which, according to Alderson, “the director read and immediately thought would be lovely as ...

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Poetry review

Get on board with the Write Out Loud gig guide!

Whether you're a newbie or a veteran; a page-poet or slam-champion; or even just a listener in the corner at the back: at Write Out Loud, we're always here to help you find your voice. And we begin wi...

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Poetry Events

Jennifer Malden's Mediterranean August is Write Out Loud's Poem of the Week!

Jennifer Malden lives in Italy and, apparently, loves it there, in particular Sardinia.  That wonderful Mediterranean air and lifestyle have clearly given her the freedom and head-space to write this ...

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Poem of the week

Peace in our broken world at Stratford-upon-Avon

The 65th annual Stratford Poetry Festival draws to a close having delivered an invigorating and varied mix of events and readings to uplift the soul.

The opening event, inspired by the closing word...

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Festival news

The Book of Upside Down Thinking: Brian Patten, Forget Me Not Books

And now for something completely different, as someone once said. A priest halfway between Heaven and Hell, a tax collector, a magician, a philosopher, a blind man, a monk and a hammer, and quite a fe...

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Review

Short story vending machines offer literary treats

Grenoble is now a bookworm's paradise, dispensing free literary treats from special vending machines across the city. Whether you're bored at the bus stop or waiting in a queue, the revolutionary 'Sho...

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Literary innovations

‘One of those Weird Unexpected Moments’ by Hazel Ettridge is Write Out Loud’s Poem of the Week

One of those weird unexpected moments certainly attracted some comments when Hazel Ettridge posted it on Write Out Loud.  Her modest response to being chosen as Poem of the Week was to say ‘Thanks, bu...

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Poem of the week

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