Causley Trust Poetry Competition – December 1st 2016
The Causley Trust International Poetry Competition 2016: The competition has a deadline of 1st December 2016 and a top prize of £2000 with a writer’s residency in Cornwall’s Launceston, the […]
The Causley Trust International Poetry Competition 2016: The competition has a deadline of 1st December 2016 and a top prize of £2000 with a writer’s residency in Cornwall’s Launceston, the […]
A Place to Write at Trelissick
From September 24th – October 30th 2016
KEAP and The Story Republic explore the working world of the writer at Trelissick this autumn.
nocturne for Jo “Our communities have been deeply enhanced by immigration, be it of Irish Catholics across the constituency or of Muslims from Gujarat in India or from Pakistan, principally […]
Sunday June 26th Spoken Word Marquee Listings
1pm to 5:00pm
1:00pm Mac Dunlop
1:30pm Tom Stockley
2:00pm 7 Stars
2:30pm MCMC Spoken
3:00pm Tanya Beale
3:30pm7 Stars/Open mic
4:00pm Mark Crees
4:30pm open mic
Dingy Shards – a sonnet by mac dunlop
Reviews of poetry rarely delve too far into negative critique. When they do it is like murder…
Discourses and debates taking place on media platforms like twitter engage us in new literary formats that some think of as poetic in and of themselves…
An exhibition of new works on canvas by The Poetry Point editor Mac Dunlop
This past Saturday, the poem Mercies by Don Patterson appeared in the Guardian Newspaper, it is a well constructed sonnet about having a dog ‘put down, as they say.
‘She might have had months left of her dog-years,
but to be who? She’d grown light as a nest…’
The relationship between humans and other animals is an interesting one, we come together, create partnerships and affections as powerful sometimes as we do with our own species. More often than not we find ourselves at time confronting what Nietzche coined as “nature’s will to power’. Meaning that life itself not only seeks to survive but also to dominate…
William Carlos Williams is best known for the poem “A Red Wheelbarrow”, but a quick search around for something relative to Thursday brought this poem up…