wordfringe 2008
1–29 May 2008
Week 4
Thursday 22 May
6.30pm
Books and Beans
Poems of Quality
Anne Ryland and Rhoda Michael, with Haworth Hodgkinson, Olivia McMahon
& Judith Taylor
Thursday 22 May
8.30pm
St Katherine's Club, Shoe Lane
AB24: Poems from a Postcode
Portal Creative Writers launch an exciting anthology, introducing
the extraordinary writer Catherine Elmslie
Friday 23 May
7pm
Midmar Church, Midmar
Poetry and Music of All the Faiths
A meditation upon belief, doubt and disbelief
Saturday 24 May
10am
Archaeolink, Oyne
Storytelling for Beginners
A workshop with Grampian Association of Storytellers
Saturday 24 May
7pm
Museum of Scottish Lighthouses, Fraserburgh
Hooked by Emerald Froth
An evening of poetry, images, music and dance from the Blue Salt Collective
Week 5
Monday 26 May
7pm
Musa
Demented Eloquence & Wordcraft Slam
Sharp and comic performance poetry from Ash Dickinson, Milton Balgoni, and Rapunzel
Wizard, plus a poetry slam contest
Tuesday 27 May
6.30pm
Aberdeen Central Library
Banchory Young Writers
Venture into Poetry
Wednesday 28 May
10am
Woodend Barn, Banchory
Slow Road Home
Poet Sheila Templeton reads and chats about her work
Wednesday 28 May
7pm
Gordon Highlanders Museum
Family Snaps
A celebration of the family in poetry, music and song with projected photos
Thursday 29 May
6.30pm
Books and Beans
A Celebration of Childhood
Launching a new anthology of poems, drawings and recipes in aid of CHILDREN 1ST(RSSPCC)
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Poems of Quality
Anne Ryland and Rhoda Michael, with Haworth Hodgkinson, Olivia McMahon
& Judith Taylor
Thursday 22 May 2008
6.30pm – 8pm
Books and Beans [Venue 1]
Admission Free
Anne Ryland writes poems of great beauty, originality and discipline which
have already received awards as an exciting new voice.
Anne Ryland's poems are subtle as Vermeer paintings — so hauntingly meditative
they make you shiver (Pascale Petit)
Rhoda Michael, poet and editor of Northwords Now, was one of the first
to recognise Anne's gifts.
They will be joined by Haworth Hodgkinson, Olivia McMahon and Judith
Taylor, established voices in the North-East and beyond.
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Anne Ryland lives in the Borders. Her first full-length collection of poetry,
Autumnologist, was published by Arrowhead Press in Spring 2006 and was shortlisted
for the Felix Dennis (Forward) First Collection Prize 2006. She was then awarded
a Northern Promise Award. Her poems have appeared in a range of magazines including
Acumen, London Magazine, Staple, Scintilla, The Interpreter's
House, Northwords, and The Red Wheelbarrow, as well as in
anthologies such as Entering the Tapestry (Enitharmon, 2003) and Four Caves
of the Heart (Second Light, 2004).
Anne writes: I've been fascinated by words and writing ever since I can remember.
At the age of six I was secretly pleased when the teacher who complained I had "a
tongue like a snake" also predicted that one day she'd be reading my book in her
wheelchair. Many of my poems are inspired by an image or by a story which almost
demands to be recreated as a poem. Certain themes keep recurring: letters, silence,
water, the Northumbrian coastline, blue and grey, stitches, bones, stones....
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Rhoda Michael was born in Beauly, got away, but is now back again. She lived
for many years in Aberdeen and is nostalgic for the bright lights of Pittodrie on
a winter afternoon. She won the 17th Poetry Life Prize 2001, and her poetry pamphlet
In Long Connected Threads was published in 2002. She is currently editor
of Northwords Now.
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Haworth Hodgkinson is a poet and musician, occasionally performing poetry
and music simultaneously when working with the Blue Salt Collective.
As a poet, he has been published in a variety of magazines and anthologies, and
in 2007 his small collection A Weakness for Mermaids was published by Koo Press.
As a musician he has composed, performed and improvised for many theatrical projects,
and has recently been playing with Susanne Olbrich's Strange Little Orchestra
in Forres and Findhorn.
See www.haworthhodgkinson.co.uk
for more.
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Olivia McMahon writes novels, poems and quirky books about language. Her
poems have appeared in a range of magazines including Stand, Mslexia,
Northwords Now and Pushing Out the Boat. Buy her collection Domestic
Verses at Books and Beans during the month of May and you might find a diamond
among its pages — a real one, of quality.
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Judith Taylor comes from Perthshire and now lives and works in Aberdeen,
where she is a member of
Lemon Tree Writers. She writes poetry in English and sometimes Scots, and
her first chapbook collection, Earthlight, was published in 2006 by Koo Press. She was Poet Number 91 in the StAnza 100 Poets
Gathering in St Andrews in March 2007.
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