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lynnlitfests.com Programme

THE WEEKEND’S EVENTSTHE WEEKEND’S EVENTS Friday 27th September 7.30pm Elisabeth Sennitt Clough Matthew Caley Helen Ivory Saturday 28th September 11.00am Discussion Is Poetry Better

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Page 1: THE WEEKEND’S EVENTSTHE WEEKEND’S EVENTS Friday 27th September 7.30pm Elisabeth Sennitt Clough Matthew Caley Helen Ivory Saturday 28th September 11.00am Discussion Is Poetry Better

lynnlitfests.com Programme

Page 2: THE WEEKEND’S EVENTSTHE WEEKEND’S EVENTS Friday 27th September 7.30pm Elisabeth Sennitt Clough Matthew Caley Helen Ivory Saturday 28th September 11.00am Discussion Is Poetry Better

Please arrive in good time to be seated. Readings will commence

promptly at listed start time

Doors will open around 30 minutes in advance

We cannot guarantee that all the writers will take part in the plenary

sessions

All seats are unreserved Events and writers are correct at

time of printing

The organisers reserve the right to make changes without notice

Please tell us if you have changed your address or wish to join the

mailing list

I N F O R M A T I O NAll events take place at The Town Hall,

Saturday Market Place, King’s Lynn PE30 5DQ The Poetry Festival presents some of the best contemporary writers in a congenial and informal

setting. The authors read and discuss their work and will be available to chat and sign your purchases from the festival’s well stocked book stall. You are welcome to join them and the festival

organisers for lunch at restaurants near the festival venue - details given at the morning events.

Ticket PricesAll events £8.50

Bargain Season Ticket £37.50 Tickets for students £1 (£5 BST)

BookingBy post with

stamped addressed envelope to

Hawkins Ryan Solicitors 19 Tuesday Market Place

King’s Lynn PE30 1JW

By telephone 01553 691661 (office hours)

In person at the above address, by website or at the door on the day

Please make cheques payable to The Poetry Festival

Raffle PrizeThe festival closes with the raffle

draw for our unique prize - a book handwritten by all the writers in

the festival

The Poetry Festivalis grateful for support from

Hawkins Ryan Solicitors

Programme and website advertisers Monthly Draw Club members

You can contribute to help fund future

literature festivals. Join the Monthly Draw Club this weekend. Subscriptions only £5 per month with valuable literary and cash prizes to be won, and you’ll receive one discounted

festival weekend pass each year

Page 3: THE WEEKEND’S EVENTSTHE WEEKEND’S EVENTS Friday 27th September 7.30pm Elisabeth Sennitt Clough Matthew Caley Helen Ivory Saturday 28th September 11.00am Discussion Is Poetry Better

T H E W E E K E N D ’ S E V E N T S

Friday 27th September7.30pm

Elisabeth Sennitt Clough

Matthew Caley

Helen Ivory

Saturday 28th September11.00am

DiscussionIs Poetry Better Served By Readers

or Listeners? Chaired by John Lucas

With contributions from the

writers and audience

Saturday 28th September3.00pm

Sue Burge

Kit Fan

Nick Drake

Saturday 28th September8.00pm

Jo Shapcott

Tim Liardet

Sunday 29th September11.00am

John Greening

Adam Feinsteinwill present his translations of the great Chilean poet,

Pablo Neruda

Sunday 29th September3.00pm

In Memorium Matthew Sweeneywith Mary Noonan

Chaired by John Lucas with contributions from the writers

The festival will close with the raffle draw

Page 4: THE WEEKEND’S EVENTSTHE WEEKEND’S EVENTS Friday 27th September 7.30pm Elisabeth Sennitt Clough Matthew Caley Helen Ivory Saturday 28th September 11.00am Discussion Is Poetry Better

Elisabeth Sennitt Clough, PhD, is an alumna of the Arvon/Jerwood Mentorship scheme 2016 and Toast Poets 2017. She was also a Ledbury Emerging Poet 2017. Her debut pamphlet, Glass, was a winner in the Paper Swans inaugural pamphlet competition in 2016. It went on to win Best Pamphlet at the Saboteur Awards 2017. Her debut collection, Sightings, was published by

Pindrop Press in December 2016. It won the Michael Schmidt Prize for Best Portfolio. A poem from that collection was highly commended in the Forward Prize and published in the Forward Book of Poetry 2018. Her second full collection, At or Below Sea Level, is a Poetry Book Society Recommendation.

Matthew Caley’s Thirst (1999) was nominated for the Forward Prize for Best First Collection. He’s published five more since then, with his sixth, Trawlerman’s Turquoise, launching at King’s Lynn. His work has featured in many anthologies including Poems of The Decade (Forward Editions); Identity Parade : New British and Irish Poetry and The Picador Book of Love Poems. Matthew has read his

work from Morden Tower, Newcastle to The National Portrait Gallery, London; from Galway to Novi Sad. In previous lives he was on the fringe of the Small Press revival in the 1980’s; designed record sleeves; lived in squats in Brixton during the 80’s-90’s; has taught in art schools. Recently, he’s tutored for The Poetry School and been Associate Lecturer in Contemporary Poetry/Creative Writing at The School of English, St Andrews University. He lives in London with the Czech artist Pavla Alchin and their two daughters, Iris and Mina.

Helen Ivory is a poet and visual artist. Her fifth Bloodaxe collection, The Anatomical Venus (May 2019), examines how women have been portrayed as ‘other’; as witches; as hysterics with wandering wombs and as beautiful corpses cast in wax, or on mortuary slabs in TV box sets. She edits the webzine Ink Sweat and Tears and is a tutor for the UEA/NCW online creative writing programme. Fool’s World, a

collaborative Tarot card project with Tom de Freston (Gatehouse Press) won the 2016 Saboteur Best Collaborative Work award. A book of mixed media poems, Hear What the Moon Told Me, appeared from KFS in 2016, and a chapbook Maps of the Abandoned City was published by SurVision Press (Ireland) earlier this year. She lives in Norwich with her husband, the poet Martin Figura, where they help run Café Writers – a live literature organisation.

Page 5: THE WEEKEND’S EVENTSTHE WEEKEND’S EVENTS Friday 27th September 7.30pm Elisabeth Sennitt Clough Matthew Caley Helen Ivory Saturday 28th September 11.00am Discussion Is Poetry Better

Sue Burge is a Norfolk-based poet and freelance teacher of writing courses since 2007. Previously, she taught Creative Writing at UEA for 20 years. She also writes and teaches courses on film, and her pamphlet Lumière was inspired by films set in Paris from 1895 through to the French New Wave directors. Her first full collection, In the Kingdom of Shadows (2018), was shortlisted for the Live Canon First

Collection Prize. Heidi Williamson wrote of “widely travelled poems both culturally and historically, journeying deep into territories of collective memory and individual psyche”.

Nick Drake was born in 1961, grew up in Hertfordshire, studied at Cambridge University and is based in London. He is a screenwriter, playwright, librettist, novelist and poet, with his first collection, The Man in the White Suit (Bloodaxe Books, 1999), being a Poetry Book Society Recom-mendation, and winner of the Forward Prize for Best First Collection. In September 2010 he travelled to the Arctic to

explore climate change. From that journey arose poems and texts for the ground-breaking installation High Arctic at the National Maritime Museum (2011). Together with other poems inspired by the Arctic and its voices, they are gathered in his collection The Farewell Glacier (Bloodaxe Books, 2012). Other recent projects include the screenplay for the film Romulus, My Father, which won best Film at the Australian Film Awards, and a trilogy of crime novels set in 18th Century Dynasty Egypt which are currently being adapted for television. His fourth poetry collection, Out of Range, was published by Bloodaxe in 2018.

Born in Hong Kong, Kit Fan moved to Britain at 21. He is a poet and fiction writer. His first book, Paper Scissors Stone, won the inaugural HKU International Poetry Prize. Kit’s second collection, As Slow As Possible, is a Poetry Book Society Recommendation and chosen by the Guardian as one of the biggest books in 2018 and The Irish Times Best Poetry Book of the Year. He won a Times

Stephen Spender Poetry Translator Prize. He was shortlisted for the Guardian 4th Estate BAME Short Story Prize consecutively in 2017 and 2018. Kit won a 2018 Northern Writers Award for Diamond Hill, a novel in progress.

Page 6: THE WEEKEND’S EVENTSTHE WEEKEND’S EVENTS Friday 27th September 7.30pm Elisabeth Sennitt Clough Matthew Caley Helen Ivory Saturday 28th September 11.00am Discussion Is Poetry Better

Jo Shapcott was born in London 1953. She was an undergraduate at Trinity College, Dublin and later studied at St Hilda’s College, Oxford. From there, she received a Harkness Fellowship to Royal Holloway College, London, where she is today Professor of Creative Writing. Her awards for collections include the Commonwealth Poetry Prize, the Forward Poetry Prize, and in 2011 she received

the Costa Prize for Of Mutability. She has twice won the National Poetry Competition. Jo has worked with musicians on collaborative projects, and in 1997 had her poems set to music and has presented poetry programmes for BBC radio. Her book Tender Taxes includes her versions from Rilke’s French Poems (2001). She is President of the Poetry Society and is considered one of Britain’s leading poets.

Born in London in 1959, Tim Liardet is a respected critic and Professor of Poetry at Bath Spa University. He has reviewed poetry for such journals as The Independent, The Independent on Sunday, and Poetry Review and The Guardian. He has produced eleven collections of poetry - his third, Competing With The Piano Tuner, was a Poetry Book Society Special Commendation and long listed for the

Whitbread poetry prize in 1998. The Blood Choir, his fifth collection, won an Arts Council England writers’ award, was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation and shortlisted for the 2006 TS Eliot prize. His New & Selected Poems, Arcimboldo’s Bulldog, was published last year and spans nine of his ten award-winning collections, and adds some new poems.

Adam Feinstein is an acclaimed British author, poet, translator, Hispanist, journalist, film critic and autism researcher. His biography of the Nobel Prize-winning poet, Pablo Neruda: A Passion for Life, was first published by Bloomsbury in 2004 and reissued in an updated edition in 2013 (Harold Pinter called it ‘a masterpiece’) along with his book of translations from Neruda’s Canto General. He also

wrote the introduction to Jorge Luis Borges’ Labyrinths, 2007. His own poems and his translations (of Neruda, Federico García Lorca, Mario Benedetti and others) have appeared in magazines, including PN Review, Agenda, Acumen, Poem and Modern Poetry in Translation. He lectures worldwide and broadcasts regularly for the BBC and writes for the Guardian, the Observer, the Financial Times and the Times Literary Supplement. Arc published his latest book of translations, The Unknown Neruda, in August 2019.

Page 7: THE WEEKEND’S EVENTSTHE WEEKEND’S EVENTS Friday 27th September 7.30pm Elisabeth Sennitt Clough Matthew Caley Helen Ivory Saturday 28th September 11.00am Discussion Is Poetry Better

Mary Noonan was born in London but grew up in Cork. She is an Irish poet and academic, lecturer in French at University College Cork, focusing on French women playwrights and film. Her poems have been widely published in journals and her debut collection, The Fado House (2012) was written during her travels and so has international settings: Paris, Berlin, India, even Muscat (Oman). The collection was

awarded the Listowel Poetry Prize and was shortlisted for both the Seamus Heaney Centre Prize for a First Collection (2013) and the Strong/Shine Award (2013). Her latest collection is Stone Girl, published by Dedalus Press in 2019, after the death of her father but before that of her partner, Matthew Sweeney.

A distinguished poet, novelist and critic, John Lucas is Professor Emeritus at the Universities of Loughborough and Nottingham Trent. He is the author of many academic works and has published seven books of his own poetry. His novels include The Good That We Do (2000) and 92 Acharnon Street (2007), which blend fiction, memoir and social history. Other recent books include A Brief History of

Whistling, an esoteric study that attracted the attention of BBC’s Have I Got News For You, and a charming and beautifully produced anthology of 10 Cricket Poems. John Lucas was the winner of the Aldeburgh Festival Poetry Prize. He runs Shoestring Press and lives in Nottingham.

Cover: The Custom House light show was created by Peter Cleary and photographed by Matthew Usher. Poet photo credits: Iris Hobson-Mazur, Dave Gutteridge,

Rachel Shapcott, Linda Ibbotson. Others supplied.

John Greening was born in Chiswick, 1954. He has published 15 collections, most recently The Silence (2019) and a collaboration with Penelope Shuttle, Heath (2016). He won an Arvon Award (judged by Hughes and Heaney) and Cholmondeley Award. A long time reviewer for the Times Literary Supplement, he worked for many years as a teacher, both in the UK and at Aswan, Upper Egypt, where

he was awarded the Alexandria Poetry Prize, and also in New Jersey, Mannheim and Arbroath. Since retiring from teaching, he has held several fellowships, most recently for the Royal Literary Fund at Newnham College, Cambridge. He has edited the work of Edmund Blunden and Geoffrey Grigson, and written studies of Elizabethan Love Poems, Yeats, Hardy, First World War Poets, Edward Thomas and Ted Hughes.

Page 8: THE WEEKEND’S EVENTSTHE WEEKEND’S EVENTS Friday 27th September 7.30pm Elisabeth Sennitt Clough Matthew Caley Helen Ivory Saturday 28th September 11.00am Discussion Is Poetry Better

Stuart HouseHotel • Bar • Restaurant

• Quiet but central location • Quality Accommodation

• 15% DISCOUNT on rooms for Literature festival visitors

(Mention this advert/program)

35 Goodwins Road, King’s Lynn. PE30 5QX www.stuarthousehotel.co.uk

email: [email protected] Tel 01553 772169

• OPEN TO NON RESIDENTS

• Cosy Real Ale Bar ‘CAMRA - Good Beer Guide’ listed

• Superb Restaurant and Bar Meals • Beer Garden

We look forward to welcoming you to the Fiction Festival, 13-15 March 2020

www. lynn l i t fes ts .com