Friday, September 30, 2011

LEAMINGTON SPA: PUREandGOODandRIGHT

Monday, October 10th, 2011, 7.30pm
The Sozzled Sausage,
Leamington Spa
CV32 4NX.

Join us for what promises to be an inspiring, hilarious and moving evening as the PGR family celebrates the life of one of its most treasured regulars: Dick Leith.
Throughout this evening our usual guest poet slot will be filled by a selection of the songs and poems Dick committed to CD before his passing.
If you've ever wondered why the Elephants needed ironing, you'll know this will be a night not to be missed.
Old hands and new poets alike are invited to come and share their wares and raise a smile.
PS. For those regulars who would like a writing challenge, and who would appreciate the chance to share what Dick meant to them...do take the opportunity to create something new...perhaps beginning 'I celebrate Dick because...'

DEFINITELY AN EVENING NOT TO BE MISSED!
With open mic support from…….yes……YOU!
Come and share your poems or enjoy the talent of others- seasoned poets & first time performers most welcome!
Admission : Donations to the charity 'Mind'.
If you would like to know more about the night, please email pgrpoetry@gmail.com
  Remember to check out our blog at http://pgrpoetry.blogspot.com ! 


BIRMINGHAM: Dice Slam (Hit The Ode Special)


Thursday, 13th October, 2011, 7pm, £7/£5
Ikon Eastside,
183 Fazeley Street,
Fazeley Studios,
Digbeth,
Birmingham
B5 5SE
Info: bohdan@applesandsnakes.org

Is it a serious poetry competition? Is it absurdist comedy? No, it's the Dice Slam, a truly unique event bringing together an astounding number of top international performance poets and an absurd set of rules. The poets perform, we throw some dice, the result becomes their score - and a hand-picked jury of quick-witted experts attempts to justify it. The audience gets to vote for their favourite critic, and in the end, poetry wins. Not to be missed!
Featuring: “B-boy” Biru, Indigo Williams, Bernhard Christiansen, Bas Boettcher, Henry Bowers, Grzegorz Bruszewski, Abby Oliveira

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

KINGSTON: Rhythm & Muse

Thursday, 29th September, 2011, 8.30pm, £6/£5 on the door

The Ram Jam Club,
46 Richmond Road,
Kingston
KT2 5EE

Poets Unlimited launch their first anthology with readings from
Fay Avsec, Sylvia Rowbottom, Angela Croft, Norman Staines, Fraser Southey and Jim Alderson.

Ordinary Magic brings together new and previously published work by 11 poets, each concerned
in their own way with the extraordinary events, thoughts and fantasies that illuminate our ordinary lives.

Plus music from The Flying Blueberries - Dudley Tyrrell and Stephanie Sara.


Full details at www.rhythmandmuse.org

LONDON: Under Stokes Croft

Thursday and Friday, September 29th & 30th, 2011, 8pm
New Britannia Theatre

Victoria Park Road
London
E9 7BT


By Jack Dean
Illustrated by Hannah Jane Morley

Unknown to most, there is a large, clumsy, furry orange monster living in Stokes Croft, Bristol's dilapidated, graffiti-scrawled cultural quarter. By day, he watches over its people and records their stories. By night, he wanders alone and paints their dreams. Or nightmares. A live graphic novel with stop-motion animation by MC and Poet Jack Dean, Under Stokes Croft takes inspiration from Dylan Thomas’ legendary Under Milk Wood ...to document 24-and-a-bit hours in the life of Bristol’s own Bohemia, centering around the infamous night of 21st April 2011, the Tesco riots. Expect fires, fears, flights and top-notch veggie burgers..

With Guest Poets RAYMOND ANTROBUS on the 29th and PETER HAYHOE on the 30th.

ABERDEEN: 9/11-Ten

Thursday, 29th September, 2011, 6.30pm, FREE
Books and Beans,
Aberdeen
9/11-TEN
Ten poems by ten local writers on the tenth year since the atrocity
Poems by Keith Murray, Sheena Blackhall, Bernard Briggs, Andrew Milne, Roger Barnett, Olivia McMahon, Sheena M. Leith, Gerard Rochford, Jim Murphy and Eddie Gibbons.
Commemorative chapbook published by Malfranteaux Concepts
  
See www.poetryaberdeen.co.uk for details, and see www.newwords.co.uk for the full festival programme

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

LONDON: Hammer and Tongue Open Poetry Slam


Monday, October 10th, 2011, 7.30pm-11pm, £5/£4
Green Note Café
106 Parkway
Camden
Nearest tube: Camden Town

Hammer and Tongue's open poetry slam proudly presents World Slam Champion HENRY BOWERS, PAULA VARJACK and RICHARD MARSH.

The slam is open to all, just sign up on the door from 7.30pm. First 8 to sign up get to slam, usual slam rules apply.
 

GALWAY: September Over The Edge Open Reading

Thursday, September 29th, 2011, 6.30pm-8pm 

Galway City Library, 

St. Augustine Street,

Galway 

Featured Readers are Aileen Armstrong, Davnet Heery and Moyra Donaldson. The evening will also see the announcement of the winners of this year’s Over The Edge New Writer of the Year. The competition judge is Elaine Feeney.

Aileen Armstrong’s writing has appeared in the Stinging Fly, Three Times Daily, Some Blind Alleys, and Cuadrivio (in Spanish translation). In 2009, she graduated from the M.A. in Writing programme at NUIG, and in 2010, she received a literature bursary award from the Arts Council of Ireland. She lives in Co. Galway, and is currently working on a collection of short stories.

A long-time resident of Cois Fharraige, Connemara, Davnet Heery enjoys solitary walks along the shore and on the bog, day-dreaming. Recently graduated from the MA in Writing at NUIG she has had a giddy summer reading at literary festivals countrywide for the launch of the class anthology Bicycles with Umbrellas. Primarily a poet (she has been grant aided by Galway Co.Co. to work towards a collection Camellia) she also enjoys writing plays. Her short story The Little Girl in Pink was short-listed for The Francis Mc Manus award, 2011.

Moyra Donaldson was born and brought up in Co Down and has been described as one of the country’s most distinctive and accomplished writers: a poet whose voice is full of integrity and mystery. Her first full collection of poems Snakeskin Stilettos was published in 1998, followed by Beneath the Ice in 2001, both from Lagan Press. She has received four awards from the Arts Council NI, most recently, the Artist Career Enhancement Award. Moyra’s poems have featured on radio and television, including the Channel 4 production, Poems to Fall in Love With. Horse’s Nest, was published by Lagan Press in 2006 and described in Poetry Ireland Review as ‘one of the most enjoyable poetry books of the last few years.’ Her most recent collection, Miracle Fruit, was published by Lagan Press in November 2010.

There will be an open-mic when the Featured Readers have finished. This is open to anyone who has a poem or story to share. New readers are always especially welcome. The MC for the evening will be Susan Millar DuMars.

There will be an open-mic when the Featured Readers have finished. This is open to anyone who has a poem or story to share. New readers are always especially welcome. The MC for the evening will be Susan Millar DuMars. For further details phone 087-6431748 or see our website http://overtheedgeliteraryevents.blogspot.com/

Over The Edge acknowledges the ongoing generous financial support of Galway City Council and The Arts Council

Monday, September 26, 2011

BRIGHTON: Self-Portrait Without Breasts



Tuesday, October 4th, 2011, reception at 6.30pm for performance at 7.30pm
Brighton and Sussex Medical School,
Chowen Lecture Theatre,
Medical School Teaching Building,
University of Sussex,
Brighton
BN1 9PX

Clare Best performs poems from her sequence exploring preventative double mastectomy, with photographs by Laura Stevens.

Followed by a discussion with Dr James Mackay, MA, MD, FRCP, FRCPE
Consultant Clinical Genetic Oncologist

Self-portrait without Breasts is included in Clare Best's debut poetry collection, Excisions, available from Waterloo Press (www.waterloopress.co.uk) now.

"A fine cycle of sustained self-examination, both physical and spiritual." - Michael Hulse
"These poems made me think again, and deeply, about how I inhabit my body, how I see myself, and how I am seen." - Sarah Salway
"Unpredictable, erotic, and philosophically demanding." - Jackie Wills


For more information about this event, and the project, visit:
www.bsms.ac.uk
www.clarebest.co.uk
selfportraitwithoutbreasts.wordpress.com










LONDON: Jazz Verse Jukebox


Sunday, 9th October, 2011, doors 6.30pm, show from 8pm, £7 (available on the door)
Upstairs @ Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club,
47 Frith Street,
London
W1D 4HT
Tube: Tottenham Court Road
 or Leicester Square
Web :www.jumokefashola.com
Email: JazzVerseJukebox@me.com


Special guests include Adisa, Katrina Naomi, Chip Grim, Den Rele and Clare Foster, plus open mic for poets/singers.
 
Compered by & with music from Jumoké Fashola
 (www.jumokefashola.com)

Adisa is a favourite on the spoken word and performance poetry scenes.  He has performed widely – from music and literature festivals to pubs, from Buckingham Palace to schools, theatres and day centres for senior citizens. He’s been a winner of a national competition New Performance Poet of the Year, a Hackney Poet Laureate and Poet-in-Residence at the Crafts Council. A prolific writer  his poetry and music one-man show, 1968: The Year That Never Ended toured the UK, taking revolution as its theme, exploring the voices and movements of one of the most influential years of the 20th century, drawing inspiration from the Folk, Reggae, Soul, Afrobeat and Pop music of the time.  He is the author of "Lip Hopping with the Fundi-Fu"  and his work has been published in various poetry anthologies. 
“Adisa is the future. It’s so good to have something to look forward to.” Benjamin Zephaniah http://www.adisaworld.com

Jazz vocalist Clare Foster has performed in New York, New Orleans, Toronto, Thailand, Singapore and toured all over the UK, Holland, Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, France and as far north as Lapland. Lauded for her versatile singing, she is equally at home singing the music of Brazil as she is performing the Jazz repertoire. In 2009 she released her fifth solo album Learning to Love. Clare teaches Jazz Vocals/Voice privately and has also taught at many conservatories including Trinity College of Music, London, The Jyvaskyla Conservatory, Finland, and in the Netherlands and Canada. www.clarefostermusic.com

Katrina Naomi’s first full collection, ‘The Girl with the Cactus Handshake’ (Templar Poetry) was shortlisted for the London New Poetry Award 2010. During 2009/10, she was the Brontë Parsonage Museum’s first writer-in-residence, and the Bronte Society published a pamphlet, ‘Charlotte Brontë’s Corset’ at the end of her residency.  Katrina has performed at festivals all over the UK, and in 2008 won the Templar Poetry Competition with her pamphlet ‘Lunch at the Elephant & Castle’. She is also a Hawthornden Fellow. Katrina was brought up in Margate and lives in south London.
'Katrina Naomi's poems are fresh and surprising - they're user-friendly, willing to link arms with you, but then they tug you along in unlikely directions. Roddy Lumsden

By day, Denrele writes preposterous stories, and a good few poems, mostly about love, lust and other sexually transmitted diseases. Sometimes she performs them. Sometimes she sings. She is probably the only living poet to ever write a tribute song to Neil Gaiman. And she's okay with that. Denrele has performed in fine venues across London including the Barbican, BAC and the South Bank and her work has been published many journals and anthologies including IC3 - The Penguin Book of New Black Writing in Britain, and Velocity: The best of Apples and Snakes.
"Notorious" Dazed and Confused Magazine
www.myspace.com/denrelepoet

Grim Chip has been appearing - and then mysteriously disappearing - on the poetry circuit for the last ten years. A boxing & cricket enthusiast, if you've caught his stuff, then you remember it - he's not an easy man to forget. His poetry, both the personal and the political, is pertinent and powerful, with a delivery to match. His work, published in Rising, South Bank Poetry and Pen Pusher proves that the page/stage divide is not one that he pays much attention to. The man takes poetry very seriously and thinks it best that you do too. Better pay attention - the brother's grim.

PLUS Jukebox Open Mic:
Come & sing with our amazing house band or perform some poetry.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

RICHMOND: Walking and Book Festival

Monday, 26th September, 2011, 7pm
Richmond Library,
Queen's Road,
Richmond,
North Yorkshire
DL10 4AE
 
Richmond Walking and Book Festival 2011
A poetry reading with Joy Howard, M R Peacocke and Ann Pilling.
Tickets: The Festival Box Office
Castle Hill Bookshop, Richmond, N Yorks
01748 824243

Thursday, September 22, 2011

LONDON: Camden Poetry Series

Friday, 7th October, 2011, 7pm (doors open 6.30pm), £5/£4, Wine
Trinity United Reform Church,
1 Buck Street,
Camden Town
London

Ruth O'Callaghan presents Acumen poets Martin Lyon and Jonathan Steffen. Poets from the floor very welcome (some longer spots available).

Please bring a copy of the poem if you wish to be considered for the new anthology which will be edited by Ruth O'Callaghan.


LONDON: Kashmir Heritage Poetry: A Tribute to Agha Shahid Ali with Ali Mirza Waheed, Kamila Shamsie


Saturday, October 8th, 2011, noon, £12 (ticket allows access to all SALF events taking place on Saturday)
Rich Mix,
35-47 Bethnal Green Road,
London,
E1 6LA

Kashmir Heritage Poetry: A Tribute to Agha Shahid Ali with Ali Mirza Waheed, Kamila Shamsie

Kashmiri American poet, translator, scholar, and teacher, Agha Shahid Ali wrote five books of poetry and edited an important collection of contemporary ghazals before his untimely death in 2001. His collections include A Walk Through the Yellow Pages, The Half-Inch Himalayas, A Nostalgist’s Map of America, The Country Without a Post Office and Rooms Are Never Finished (finalist for the National Book Award, 2001). His last book was Call Me Ishmael Tonight, a collection of English ghazals. Ali was also a translator of Faiz Ahmed Faiz (The Rebel’s Silhouette: Selected Poems) and became widely credited for popularising the ghazal 
form in America. In this event, drawing on images and selected passages, Kamila Shamsie pays tribute to his work, with readings from Mirza Waheed.

KINGSTON: Rhythm & Muse

Thursday, 29th September, 2011, 8.30pm, £6/£5 on the door
The Ram Jam Club,
46 Richmond Road,
Kingston
KT2 5EE

Poets Unlimited launch their first anthology with readings from
Fay Avsec, Sylvia Rowbottom, Angela Croft, Norman Staines, Fraser Southey and Jim Alderson.

Ordinary Magic brings together new and previously published work by 11 poets, each concerned
in their own way with the extraordinary events, thoughts and fantasies that illuminate our ordinary lives.

Plus music from The Flying Blueberries - Dudley Tyrrell and Stephanie Sara.


Full details at www.rhythmandmuse.org

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

SCARBOROUGH: The Valley Press Reading 2011

Thursday, 22nd September 2011, 6pm-7.30pm, £3 on the door, refreshments provided
Scarborough Library,
Vernon Road,
Scarborough,
North Yorkshire,
YO11 2NN

The Valley Press Reading 2011
A chance to meet (and listen to) the authors published by Scarborough's Valley Press so far in 2011.  Featuring no less than six of the finest poets in Yorkshire - Helen Burke, Jo Reed, James McLoughlin, Deirdre McGarry - plus, the first chance to get hold of Miles Cain's debut collection The Border, officially released in early October. For further info on VP consult www.valleypressuk.com

PLYMOUTH: Forked

Thursday, 22nd September, 2011, 8.30pm, £5 in advance, £7 on door, £4 NUS
B-Bar,
Barbican Theatre,
Castle Street,
Plymouth
PL1 2NJ

Everyone’s favourite jazz floozy Mama Tokus hosts the evening, as we travel with her into mad-cap musical poetry, heart surgery, feminism, comedy and Facebook updates! Check it out:
Featuring: Superbard, Richard Tyrone Jones, Keli Anne B and OneNess Sankara.

For more information on the night or the featured artists visit www.applesandsnakes.org

STOCKTON-ON-TEES: Articulate - Funny Ha Ha, Funny Peculiar

Thursday, 22nd September, 2011, 7.30pm, £5
ARC,
Dovecot Street,
Stockton-on-Tees
TS18 1LL

Apples and Snakes return to guest curate this night of outstanding spoken word, headlined by Bristol’s own ‘sink estate dandy’, the superbly surreal Byron Vincent.
 
Byron Vincent's oratory fuses comedy, poetry and doe eyed bewilderment to create a unique and entertaining spoken word experience. One of BBC poetry season's New Talent Choices, Byron is a regular at the nation's most prestigious literary and music festivals, and he has performed several times on television and national radio.


Also featuring: King Ink, and your genteel hostess Marjorie Pickering.

Info: kirsten@applesandsnakes.org  / www.arconline.co.uk

BIRMINGHAM: Hit The Ode

Thursday, 22nd September, 2011, 7.30pm, £5
The Victoria,
48 John Bright Street,
Birmingham
B1 1BN

This is Hit the Ode, bringing the best poets from the region, the country, and the world to Birmingham. A spoken word poetry night full of poems which you can wear on your skin like tattoos or wrap around your neck like ties; poems which go well with your favourite shirt, you know, the one which makes your eyes pop; poems you can use as earrings, nose rings, engagement rings; poems which will make passers-by do double-takes as you drive them home after the show. Good poems. Featuring Zack Homeless, Evoke, Rachel Rose Reid and Derrick Brown.
Open Mic slots available on  the door

Info: bohdan@applesandsnakes.org / www.applesandsnakes.org

ABERDEEN: The Blue Remembered Hills

Thursday, September 22nd, 2011, 6.30pm, FREE
Books and Beans,
Aberdeen

The Blue Remembered Hills
The past recalled in memoir and poetry to musical accompaniment – Brian Farrington will entertain with readings from his recently published memoir, A Rich Soup with Additional Material. Supporting poets will perform poems evoking their own remembrance of times past. And the music will play on. 
Part of the New Words 2011 Festival.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

LONDON: Hammer and Tongue


Tuesday, October 4th, 2011, 8pm-11pm, doors and DJ from 7pm, £5/£4
The Victoria,
451 Queensbridge Road,
Dalston
E8 3AS

Hammer and Tongue, performance poetry and spoken word.
Live spoken word and open mic slam poetry competition with guests:
Henry Bowers - "enormously talented" spoken word poet and rapper from Sweden. Surreal and complex wordplay with fire, homour and a fantastic beard.
and
Keith Jarrett - Former London, UK slam champion and World Slam poet semi-finalist,
plus an open mic slam competition to win the last place in the Hammer and Tongue final. All styles and flavours welcome.

Arrive early for slam sign-up.
Contact: samberkson@gmail.com

LONDON: Jawdance

Wednesday, 21st September, 2011, 7.30pm, FREE
Rich Mix,
35–47 Bethnal Green Road,
London,
E1 6LA
www.richmix.org.uk / 020 7613 7498 / boxoffice@richmix.org.uk
Open Mic: russell@applesandsnakes.org

What do you need to unlock the door to brilliant performance poetry?
A skeleton key!
That’s because Jawdance is your portal to some incredible spoken word. So come on in – we’ve already opened the door for you as entry is FREE!
We have feature acts from the poetry hall of fame and a lively host as your gatekeeper of verse. There are poetry-films to watch and an easily-approachable bar, so do cross the threshold into our poetical sitting room.
Get down there early if you want to sign up for open mic and if you’ve made a poetry-film, please drop us a line!
Every third Wednesday of the month at Rich Mix! Jawdance – they’re all talking about it, and it’s all about talking.

BIRMINGHAM: Rhymes

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011, 8pm, £5
The Station Pub,
Kings Heat
Birmingham
 
This month’s poets are James Bunting, James Barnett, Naomi Paul, David Calcutt and special guests The Decadent Poetry Divas!
JAMES BUNTING has been performing for around a year, though writing much longer. In that time he has won several slams, including representing his university in two team slams, performed in cities around the country and was lucky enough to perform at Latitude festival this summer.
 
JAMES BARNETT is a cataloguing librarian from the University of Birmingham who awkwardly stumbled into the spoken word arena in February, performing his first ever open-mic slot at ‘Hit the Ode’. As befitting a librarian, his metaphors are dusty and his line-breaks suitably wary of disorder.
 
NAOMI PAUL is a comedian and actress as well as an engaging and versatile poetess. Whether riding a hippy bus out of downtown Oakland, or protesting about books thrown out of libraries, Naomi gives a hilarious quirky unique viewpoint, beautifully delivered.
 
DAVID CALCUTT is a poet, novelist and playwright. He has written plays for theatre and the BBC. His latest novel, The Map of Marvels, is published by Oxford University Press. He is currently working alongside fellow poets Jacqui Rowe and Deb Alma writing poems with people with Dementia in care homes in Herefordshire.

Also, to wrap up Rhymes as we know it with a special treat, we have the Decadent Poetry Divas, fresh from this year's Artfest. Four fantastic local female poets will be performing new work based around their experiences of being 'women of a certain age'.  Lorna Meehan will be covering that awkward/liberating post-teenage stage of turning twenty, budding poet Laura Yates will be focusing on being all 'grown up and responsible' in her thirties, Charlie Jordan will be examining the trails and tribulations of life in your forties, finishing with Maggie Doyle's take on the joys of your fifties. Cautionary tales, heart warming nostalgia and the occasional eyebrow raising confession, delivered with impeccable style.

Monday, September 19, 2011

LONDON: Under Stokes Croft


Thursday and Friday, September 29th & 30th, 2011, 8pm
New Britannia Theatre

Victoria Park Road
London
E9 7BT


By Jack Dean
Illustrated by Hannah Jane Morley

Unknown to most, there is a large, clumsy, furry orange monster living in Stokes Croft, Bristol's dilapidated, graffiti-scrawled cultural quarter. By day, he watches over its people and records their stories. By night, he wanders alone and paints their dreams. Or nightmares. A live graphic novel with stop-motion animation by MC and Poet Jack Dean, Under Stokes Croft takes inspiration from Dylan Thomas’ legendary Under Milk Wood ...to document 24-and-a-bit hours in the life of Bristol’s own Bohemia, centering around the infamous night of 21st April 2011, the Tesco riots. Expect fires, fears, flights and top-notch veggie burgers..

With Guest Poets RAYMOND ANTROBUS on the 29th and PETER HAYHOE on the 30th.

LONDON: Lumen Poetry Series

Tuesday, 20th September, 2011, doors open 6.30pm for 7pm, £5/£4, WINE
LUMEN
88 Tavistock Place
WC1
Tubes: Russell Square , Kings Cross, St Pancras.

Ruth O'Callaghan presents Cinnamon Press poets Chris Considine, Steve Griffiths and Christine Webb. Poets from the floor very welcome.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

NOTTINGHAM: Shindig!

Sunday, 18th September, 2011, 7.30pm, FREE
The Jam Café,
Heathcote Street,
Nottingham

Nine Arches Press & LeftLion present Nottingham Shindig!
WITH SPECIAL GUEST WRITERS: Angela France, Tom Warner and Joel Lane
Angela France has had poems published in many of the leading journals, in the UK and abroad, and has been anthologised a number of times. She has an MA in ‘Creative and Critical Writing’ from the University of Gloucestershire and is studying for a PhD. Her second collection, Occupation is available from Ragged Raven Press. Angela is features editor of Iota and an editor of ezine The Shit Creek Review. She also runs a monthly poetry café in Cheltenham, ‘Buzzwords’ 
Tom Warner was born in Mansfield in 1979. In 2001 he won an Eric Gregory Award and graduated from the University of East Anglia’s Creative Writing MA with a Distinction. His poetry has appeared in a number of publications and magazines, including The Rialto and Stand, and in 2009-10 he was Poet in Residence for Newark-on-Trent. He currently lives in Norwich where he teaches creative writing.
Joel Lane lives in Birmingham and works as a journalist. He is the author of two novels, three collections of short stories, a novella, a chapbook, and three collections of poetry, the most recent of which is The Autumn Myth (Arc). Joel has co-edited (with Steve Bishop) the crime and suspense fiction anthology Birmingham Noir. His latest publication is Do Not Pass Go – a collection of crime stories as part of the Hotwire short-story pamphlet series (Nine Arches Press).
Sign up for the Open Mic on the door.

HAWORTH: Grey Hen Press reading

Sunday, 18th September, 2pm-4pm, FREE
The Bronte Parsonage Museum,
Haworth
As part of the Festival of Women’s Writing, there will be readings from all the Grey Hen anthologies with Carole Bromley, Helen Burke, Julia Deakin, Cathy Grindrod, Jo Haslam, Joy Howard, Pauine Kirk, Hilary J Murray, Alison Orlowska, Gina Shaw and Josie Walsh.

LONDON: Monsters of Poetry

Sunday, September 18th, 2011, 7pm, £3
BAC Cafe,
Lavender Hill,
Battersea,
London
SW11 5TN

Clapham Junction and Apples and Snakes present MONSTERS OF POETRY
When you grow up, it's not the monsters under the bed that keep you awake at night, it's the thought that one day you may have to attend a poetry cabaret. Well, we say feel the fear and do it anyway! Tonight's line-up features some of the true giants and jabberwocks of the spoken-word scene: Yemisi Blake, Comfort, Richard Marsh and Aoife Mannix, all in the deceptively unfiendish setting of the BAC cafe. You'll find that well-honed wordplay is nothing to be scared of. They're not really monsters, you see, they've just got big personalities. Part of SW11 Literary Festival.
Info: www.clapham-junction.com / www.applesandsnakes.org

Thursday, September 15, 2011

ABERDEEN: 9/11-Ten


Thursday, 29th September, 2011, 6.30pm, FREE
Books and Beans,
Aberdeen

9/11-TEN
Ten poems by ten local writers on the tenth year since the atrocity
Poems by Keith Murray, Sheena Blackhall, Bernard Briggs, Andrew Milne, Roger Barnett, Olivia McMahon, Sheena M. Leith, Gerard Rochford, Jim Murphy and Eddie Gibbons.
Commemorative chapbook published by Malfranteaux Concepts
  
See www.poetryaberdeen.co.uk for details, and see www.newwords.co.uk for the full festival programme

SCARBOROUGH: The Valley Press Reading 2011


Thursday, 22nd September 2011, 6pm-7.30pm, £3 on the door, refreshments provided
Scarborough Library,
Vernon Road,
Scarborough,
North Yorkshire,
YO11 2NN

The Valley Press Reading 2011
A chance to meet (and listen to) the authors published by Scarborough's Valley Press so far in 2011.  Featuring no less than six of the finest poets in Yorkshire - Helen Burke, Jo Reed, James McLoughlin, Deirdre McGarry - plus, the first chance to get hold of Miles Cain's debut collection The Border, officially released in early October. For further info on VP consult www.valleypressuk.com

LEWES: Clare Best launch reading

Friday, September 16th, 2011, 7pm for 7.45pm, FREE
Needlemakers Cafe,
West Street,
Lewes

Waterloo Press and Needlewriters present the launch of Excisions, by Clare Best.
An unusually clear and direct debut collection. The poems speak of one life, but resound with universal themes of love and passion, inheritance and physicality, loss and adaptation. Includes the acclaimed sequence Self-portrait without Breasts, inspired by the poet's own journey through preventative double mastectomy.   
  
An outstanding first collection. Clare Best treads a sure path through intensity, complication and danger, and the resulting poems question the very nature of change or loss.
- Susan Wicks

GALWAY: September Over The Edge Open Reading

Thursday, September 29th, 2011, 6.30pm-8pm
Galway City Library,
St. Augustine Street,
Galway 


Featured Readers are Aileen Armstrong, Davnet Heery and Moyra Donaldson. The evening will also see the announcement of the winners of this year’s Over The Edge New Writer of the Year. The competition judge is Elaine Feeney.

Aileen Armstrong’s writing has appeared in the Stinging Fly, Three Times Daily, Some Blind Alleys, and Cuadrivio (in Spanish translation). In 2009, she graduated from the M.A. in Writing programme at NUIG, and in 2010, she received a literature bursary award from the Arts Council of Ireland. She lives in Co. Galway, and is currently working on a collection of short stories.

A long-time resident of Cois Fharraige, Connemara, Davnet Heery enjoys solitary walks along the shore and on the bog, day-dreaming. Recently graduated from the MA in Writing at NUIG she has had a giddy summer reading at literary festivals countrywide for the launch of the class anthology Bicycles with Umbrellas. Primarily a poet (she has been grant aided by Galway Co.Co. to work towards a collection Camellia) she also enjoys writing plays. Her short story The Little Girl in Pink was short-listed for The Francis Mc Manus award, 2011.

Moyra Donaldson was born and brought up in Co Down and has been described as one of the country’s most distinctive and accomplished writers: a poet whose voice is full of integrity and mystery. Her first full collection of poems Snakeskin Stilettos was published in 1998, followed by Beneath the Ice in 2001, both from Lagan Press. She has received four awards from the Arts Council NI, most recently, the Artist Career Enhancement Award. Moyra’s poems have featured on radio and television, including the Channel 4 production, Poems to Fall in Love With. Horse’s Nest, was published by Lagan Press in 2006 and described in Poetry Ireland Review as ‘one of the most enjoyable poetry books of the last few years.’ Her most recent collection, Miracle Fruit, was published by Lagan Press in November 2010.

There will be an open-mic when the Featured Readers have finished. This is open to anyone who has a poem or story to share. New readers are always especially welcome. The MC for the evening will be Susan Millar DuMars.

There will be an open-mic when the Featured Readers have finished. This is open to anyone who has a poem or story to share. New readers are always especially welcome. The MC for the evening will be Susan Millar DuMars. For further details phone 087-6431748 or see our website http://overtheedgeliteraryevents.blogspot.com/

Over The Edge acknowledges the ongoing generous financial support of Galway City Council and The Arts Council

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

ABERDEEN: Stuart B Campbell

Thursday, September 15th, 2011, 6.30pm, FREE
Books and Beans,
Aberdeen 
In September, Poetry Aberdeen presents three events at Books and Beans as part of the New Words 2011 festival.
Stuart B. Campbell lives in Portsoy on the Moray Firth. He has published four collections of poetry; his most recent, In Defence of Protozoans (Dionysia Press, Edinburgh) came out in June this year; he also regularly reviews of new poetry.
Guest poets will include Catriona Yule.

SOUTHAMPTON: The Soul Cellar Slam

Thursday, 15th September, 2011, 7.30pm, £3
The Soul Cellar,
78 West Marlands Road,
Southampton
SO14 7FW
Info: www.applesandsnakes.org
Apples and Snakes presents THE SOUL CELLAR SLAM (SOUTHAMPTON VS BOURNEMOUTH)

The Soul Cellar in Southampton will see the return bout of the poetry slam between Southampton and Bournemouth. In the first match in April in Bournemouth, the team of Freeway Poets from The Winchester, came out on top, with Bournemouth’s Keli-Anne B taking individual honours by a mere 1 point. This time the Southampton team are out for revenge on home soil…Some of the finest tongue twisters, lyric spitters, smouldering sonneteers and obscure ode-ists from Southampton and Bournemouth’s burgeoning spoken word scenes will be donning their glad rags to take to the stage in a high-stakes poetry extravaganza during which the audience are encouraged to cheer and whoop for their favourite bards. Guest feature poet: Vanessa Kisuule

Monday, September 12, 2011

RICHMOND: Walking and Book Festival


Monday, 26th September, 2011, 7pm
Richmond Library,
Queen's Road,
Richmond,
North Yorkshire
DL10 4AE
 

Richmond Walking and Book Festival 2011
A poetry reading with Joy Howard, M R Peacocke and Ann Pilling.

Tickets: The Festival Box Office
Castle Hill Bookshop, Richmond, N Yorks

01748 824243

LEAMINGTON SPA: PUREandGOODandRIGHT

Monday, September 12th, 2011, 7.30pm, £3 (£2 Student/OAP)
The Sozzled Sausage,
Leamington Spa
CV32 4NX
This month we are delighted to have the Birmingham Poet Laureate Roy McFarlane.
Roy was inaugurated as Birmingham Poet Laureate, October 2010. He was born in Birmingham of Jamaican parentage and spent most of his former years living in Wolverhampton. As Resident Poet at Starbucks (2007), a solo performer and a member of the New October Poets, he has performed in numerous venues, sharing the stage with poets such as Roi Kwabena, Fred D’Aguiar and Talking Brothers. He is a regular with City Voices and Writers without Borders. Roy has had poems published in anthologies and in magazines, such as Under the Radar. Furthermore he has had a short story Conversation with an Ant published in Original Skin  and his play For the Love of Auset premiered at The Drum, Aston, in June 2007. At present, he is studying a MA in Writing at the National Academy of Writing, Birmingham City University as well as captivating audiences with his powerful  poetry performance.
'A charismatic, powerful, engaging performer...  an enormously likeable manner augers well for the coming months.'
Gary Longdon: review in Behind the Arras
DEFINITELY AN EVENING NOT TO BE MISSED!
With open mic support from…….yes……YOU!
Come and share your poems or enjoy the talent of others- seasoned poets & first time performers most welcome!

If you would like to know more about the night, please email pgrpoetry@gmail.com

Look forward to seeing you there!

Remember to check out our blog at http://pgrpoetry.blogspot.com !!!

NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE: Tyneside Cinema Open Slam

Monday, 12th September, 2011, 7.30pm, £5/£4
Tyneside Cinema 3rd floor bar,
10 Pilgrim Street,
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE1 6QG
Info: www.radikalwords.com
Radikal Words, in association with Apples and Snakes, presents
TYNESIDE CINEMA OPEN SLAM
This is an Open Slam and anyone can take part. All you need is a maximum of five poems, no longer than three minutes. The winner gets a BIG MONEY cash prize of £30 plus a fantastic trophy letting the world know they are “The All Comers Cinema Slam Champion 2011.” So come along and experience fast, fun and exciting poetry!
With special guest Kenny Baraka.

Thursday, September 08, 2011

PLYMOUTH: Forked

Thursday, 22nd September, 2011, 8.30pm, £5 in advance, £7 on door, £4 NUS
B-Bar,
Barbican Theatre,
Castle Street,
Plymouth
PL1 2NJ

Everyone’s favourite jazz floozy Mama Tokus hosts the evening, as we travel with her into mad-cap musical poetry, heart surgery, feminism, comedy and Facebook updates! Check it out:
Featuring: Superbard, Richard Tyrone Jones, Keli Anne B and OneNess Sankara.

For more information on the night or the featured artists visit www.applesandsnakes.org

STOCKTON-ON-TEES: Articulate - Funny Ha Ha, Funny Peculiar

Thursday, 22nd September, 2011, 7.30pm, £5
ARC,
Dovecot Street,
Stockton-on-Tees
TS18 1LL

Apples and Snakes return to guest curate this night of outstanding spoken word, headlined by Bristol’s own ‘sink estate dandy’, the superbly surreal Byron Vincent.
 
Byron Vincent's oratory fuses comedy, poetry and doe eyed bewilderment to create a unique and entertaining spoken word experience. One of BBC poetry season's New Talent Choices, Byron is a regular at the nation's most prestigious literary and music festivals, and he has performed several times on television and national radio.


Also featuring: King Ink, and your genteel hostess Marjorie Pickering.

Info: kirsten@applesandsnakes.org  / www.arconline.co.uk

BIRMINGHAM: Hit The Ode


Thursday, 22nd September, 2011, 7.30pm, £5
The Victoria,
48 John Bright Street,
Birmingham
B1 1BN

This is Hit the Ode, bringing the best poets from the region, the country, and the world to Birmingham. A spoken word poetry night full of poems which you can wear on your skin like tattoos or wrap around your neck like ties; poems which go well with your favourite shirt, you know, the one which makes your eyes pop; poems you can use as earrings, nose rings, engagement rings; poems which will make passers-by do double-takes as you drive them home after the show. Good poems. Featuring Zack Homeless, Evoke, Rachel Rose Reid and Derrick Brown.

Open Mic slots available on  the door

Info: bohdan@applesandsnakes.org / www.applesandsnakes.org

ABERDEEN: The Blue Remembered Hills


Thursday, September 22nd, 2011, 6.30pm, FREE
Books and Beans,
Aberdeen

The Blue Remembered Hills
The past recalled in memoir and poetry to musical accompaniment – Brian Farrington will entertain with readings from his recently published memoir, A Rich Soup with Additional Material. Supporting poets will perform poems evoking their own remembrance of times past. And the music will play on. 

Part of the New Words 2011 Festival.

LONDON: Monsters of Poetry


Sunday, September 18th, 2011, 7pm, £3
BAC Cafe,
Lavender Hill,
Battersea,
London
SW11 5TN

Clapham Junction and Apples and Snakes present MONSTERS OF POETRY
When you grow up, it's not the monsters under the bed that keep you awake at night, it's the thought that one day you may have to attend a poetry cabaret. Well, we say feel the fear and do it anyway! Tonight's line-up features some of the true giants and jabberwocks of the spoken-word scene: Yemisi Blake, Comfort, Richard Marsh and Aoife Mannix, all in the deceptively unfiendish setting of the BAC cafe. You'll find that well-honed wordplay is nothing to be scared of. They're not really monsters, you see, they've just got big personalities. Part of SW11 Literary Festival.

Info: www.clapham-junction.com / www.applesandsnakes.org

GALWAY: September Over The Edge Writers’ Gathering

Friday, September 9th, 2011, 8pm, All are welcome, FREE
The Kitchen @ The Museum,
Spanish Arch,
Galway
The September Over The Edge Writers’ Gathering presents readings by poets from Ireland, the UK and France. Visiting poets Richard Halperin, Jane Clarke and C.P. Stewart will read their work. Also reading on the night will be members of the legendary Galway-based poetry workshop, The Skylight Poets, who will showcase their exciting new anthology, Mosaic, which has already garnered praise from renowned poets Moya Cannon and Mary O’Malley.
Richard W. Halperin holds a Ph.D. in English Literature from the City University of New York. Until 2005 he was chief of teacher education for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Paris, which entailed travel and work in Asia, Africa and Central and Eastern Europe. For UNESCO, he edited the downloadable book Reading and Writing Poetry: The Recommendations of Noted Poets from Many Lands on the Teaching of Poetry in Secondary Schools, available in English, French and Spanish versions.  He will read from his poetry collection, Anniversary, which was published last year by Salmon Poetry.
Originally from a farm in Roscommon, Jane Clarke, now lives in Wicklow and is a member of Airfield Writers. She has had poems published in Cyphers, Crannóg, Revival, The Shop, The Stony Thursday Book, Southword and has won a number of prizes, including the Listowel Writers’ Week Prize (2007). In 2009 she was selected for the Poetry Ireland Introductions Series. She is currently studying for an MPhil in Writing with the University of Glamorgan, Wales. Jane is short-listed for this year’s Over The Edge New Writer of The Year competition.
C.P. Stewart lives with his family in North Yorkshire. Formerly singer/songwriter with the cult band Laughing Gravy, his poetry has been widely published in Canada, Australia, Ireland, England and the United States. For two years he was the Poetry Editor of Sotto Voce Arts and Literary magazine (U.S.). A chapbook of his poetry, Taking it In was published by Koo Poetry Press in 2009. His New and Selected Poems, Considering the Lilies, was published earlier this year by the Galway-based publisher Wordsonthestreet.
Skylight Poets is the collective name for an unlikely bunch of writers who have gathered on Thursday afternoons in a sparsely furnished room with four skylights at the top of Galway Arts Centre in Dominick Street Galway. Under the guidance of poet and workshop director Kevin Higgins the first anthology from this motley group Lady Gregory’s Townhouse was published in 2009. This was followed in 2010 by the highly praised Behind the Masks and this year sees the publication of the Skylight Poets’ third anthology Mosaic. Edited by Sarah Clancy, Des Kavanagh, Deirdre Kearney and Kevin O’Shea, Mosaic has already garnered praise from renowned poets Moya Cannon and Mary O'Malley.
The Kitchen @ The Museum has a wine licence. For further information contact 087-6431748.

Wednesday, September 07, 2011

LONDON: Jawdance


Wednesday, 21st September, 2011, 7.30pm, FREE
Rich Mix,
35–47 Bethnal Green Road,
London,
E1 6LA
www.richmix.org.uk / 020 7613 7498 / boxoffice@richmix.org.uk
Open Mic: russell@applesandsnakes.org

What do you need to unlock the door to brilliant performance poetry?
A skeleton key!
That’s because Jawdance is your portal to some incredible spoken word. So come on in – we’ve already opened the door for you as entry is FREE!
We have feature acts from the poetry hall of fame and a lively host as your gatekeeper of verse. There are poetry-films to watch and an easily-approachable bar, so do cross the threshold into our poetical sitting room.
Get down there early if you want to sign up for open mic and if you’ve made a poetry-film, please drop us a line!
Every third Wednesday of the month at Rich Mix! Jawdance – they’re all talking about it, and it’s all about talking.

BIRMINGHAM: Rhymes

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011, 8pm, £5
The Station Pub,
Kings Heat
Birmingham
 
This month’s poets are James Bunting, James Barnett, Naomi Paul, David Calcutt and special guests The Decadent Poetry Divas!

JAMES BUNTING has been performing for around a year, though writing much longer. In that time he has won several slams, including representing his university in two team slams, performed in cities around the country and was lucky enough to perform at Latitude festival this summer.
 
JAMES BARNETT is a cataloguing librarian from the University of Birmingham who awkwardly stumbled into the spoken word arena in February, performing his first ever open-mic slot at ‘Hit the Ode’. As befitting a librarian, his metaphors are dusty and his line-breaks suitably wary of disorder.
 
NAOMI PAUL is a comedian and actress as well as an engaging and versatile poetess. Whether riding a hippy bus out of downtown Oakland, or protesting about books thrown out of libraries, Naomi gives a hilarious quirky unique viewpoint, beautifully delivered.
 
DAVID CALCUTT is a poet, novelist and playwright. He has written plays for theatre and the BBC. His latest novel, The Map of Marvels, is published by Oxford University Press. He is currently working alongside fellow poets Jacqui Rowe and Deb Alma writing poems with people with Dementia in care homes in Herefordshire.

Also, to wrap up Rhymes as we know it with a special treat, we have the Decadent Poetry Divas, fresh from this year's Artfest. Four fantastic local female poets will be performing new work based around their experiences of being 'women of a certain age'.  Lorna Meehan will be covering that awkward/liberating post-teenage stage of turning twenty, budding poet Laura Yates will be focusing on being all 'grown up and responsible' in her thirties, Charlie Jordan will be examining the trails and tribulations of life in your forties, finishing with Maggie Doyle's take on the joys of your fifties. Cautionary tales, heart warming nostalgia and the occasional eyebrow raising confession, delivered with impeccable style.

ABERDEEN: New Words 2011


September 8th-29th, 2011
Festival of New Writing in Aberdeen and North-East Scotland
New Words is North-East Scotland's innovative festival exploring the spoken and written word in performance, with events taking place in venues in Aberdeen and towns and villages throughout Aberdeenshire.
This year's highlights include two collaborations with local music societies who are beginning their autumn seasons with events that combine poetry and music. In Huntly, Music Centeral features Paulina Vanderbilt launching a collection of poetry written in response to her journey along the pilgrim route to Santiago de Compostela. The poems will be interspersed with medieval music associated with route performed by the Artisans, an early music group from London, and the programme also includes local writer Lucy Aykroyd reflecting on her own pilgrimage to Santiago.
In contrast, Inverurie Music brings a programme of poetry, jazz and improvised music from the St Andrews based group Trio Verso.
Aberdeen publisher Malfranteaux Concepts has put together a carefully considered set of ten poems by ten poets to mark the tenth anniversary of the events of 11 September 2001. These will be presented in two different events: an outdoor commemoration on the anniversary itself and a performance with music later in the month to end the festival on a contemplative note.
New Words 2011 is noticeably smaller than the festival has been in previous years. Some of our partner organisations have been unable to put on events this year due to funding and other constraints, but despite the difficulties a core of promoters expressed a determination to continue, and they have assembled a festival programme to be proud of. While the number of events may be reduced, we are sure the quality will be as high as ever. Prepare to be entertained, challenged and stimulated!
Most events are modestly priced — some are free — and we avoid clashing events so you can come to as many as you choose. Browse the Event Calendar, be adventurous, visit venues you have never been to before, and find out why those who have discovered the festival keep coming back for more!
Haworth Hodgkinson (acting coordinator, North East Writers)
See www.newwords.co.uk for the full festival programme