Showing posts with label Peter Riley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Riley. Show all posts

28 September, 2015

Past and Present

What a special Kulturá night September's event was. 

Peter Riley gave an assured, critically incisive lecture on the work of John Riley and Anne Caldwell read with an engaging warmth from past and new work. A fabulous pairing. Thank you Peter and Anne.

A strong open mic included readings by David Cooke, Bob Horne, Emma Decent, Shirley-Anne Kennedy, Andy Smith and Seamus Kelly. Great to see the poets Charlotte Wetton and Sarah Corbett in the audience.





In our poetry debate section Marian Tonge read 'To a Poet a Thousand Years Hence' by James Elroy Flecker. A lively discussion followed.

A football in Brazil's colours has been signed by yet more poets to entice Steve Ely to return to Kulturá for a third time in 2015, read in the open mic, and collect his signed hat-trick ball.

Peter Riley's pamphlet, including out of print poems by John Riley can be ordered via our blog, leave a comment here if you would like one and we will be in touch. There are only a few copies left.

In October Ian Duhig is delivering the lecture and Wendy Pratt is feature poet.

Dale Hibbert and Sveta have agreed to let Kulturá run our event from Kava in 2016. Thanks to Dale, Sveta and staff. 

29 May, 2015

May at Kulturá

We had a fantastic evening of poetry at this month's Kulturá.

Michael Francis Crowley had us enthralled with his lecture on history and poetry with regard to the first fleet of 1788, and Carcanet Press poet Evan Jones entranced us with a reading from his book 'Paralogues'.

Eight poets read in the open mic section:

  • Jackie Phillips
  • Shirley-Anne Kennedy
  • Eileen Earnshaw
  • Richard Holley
  • Bob Horne
  • Robert Baylis
  • Joe Ranter
  • Natalie Burnett
with poems about egg-yolk children, the Yorkshire moors, 'Northern Powerhouses', flirting with girls in France, coffee, magpies, blood, testosterone and other subjects.

We had a full audience which included Bob Horne of the Puzzle Hall Inn Poets and poetic luminaries such as Sarah Corbett and Peter Riley.

In June we have Michael D Conley as feature poet and Sheila Wild giving the third Kava poetry lecture.

Thanks to the staff at Kava Kafe, Todmorden for accommodating us and to Dale Hibbert and his wife Sveta for providing us with the venue. And to Shirley-Anne Kennedy for helping me run the event and creating our new website.

Anthony

17 May, 2015

Lectures

April

John Foggin
John Foggin author of the award-winning 'Larach', gave the inaugural Káva poetry lecture on a theme of 'Reinventing Poetry'. In a virtuoso lecture which included audience interaction, John's talk included a personal reflection on his time as an English teacher, a paeon to the importance of the oral tradition in poetry and a homage to the work of Andrew Marvell and Tony Harrison. A truly memorable experience. John's lecture is available for sale in pamphlet form for £2.  

28 May

Michael Francis Crowley
Taking as its staring point quotes from Elizabeth Fry and Simon Schama's 'Landscape and Memory', Michael Crowley's lecture focusses on the First Fleet in 1788. Michael's lecture merges historical fact with the voices of historical characters like Jane Fitzgerald, James Ruse and the aborigine Bennelong, to poeticise the experiences of people who are ill-served by dry historical enquiry, or who are barely mentioned in the literature of 18th Century Australia. Michael's humane and ambitious project is a collection of poems to give space to these voices, and his lecture argues forcibly and passionately their right to be heard. Michael's lecture is available at £2 for those who could not make the evening. 

25 June

Sheila Wild

A beautifully written lecture of clear vision and passionate intent. 'The Art of Unsaying' focusses on the white page that foregrounds and frames the poem, teaches us the value of the spare beauty of Japanese poetry, particularly haiku, the elements of Buddhist practice that informs the poet's raison d'etre. Sheila Wild, with many examples from Japanese and Norwegian and English poetry, argues successfully the case against prolixity in English verse and reminds us of the importance of attentiveness in our reader responses, and highlights poetry's exquisite ambigousness. 

30 July

Steve Ely

Steve Ely's ambitious lecture argues for the importance of an authentic idiom for contemporary English poetry that can both pay homage to, and revitalise the language from, the classic English Bibles of the past. The lecture highlights the poetic literary tropes - repetition, parallelism, economy - that make reading bibles such as the king James Version a high and essential literary experience that somehow connects to what Englishness means in terms of culture, history, language, peoples. Steve interweaves his personal journey as a poet into a narrative of high seriousness and parochial passion. A desert island discs selection of his current favourite passages from various bibles adorn this lecture pamphlet. There are a limited number of copies of his lecture available for ordering via this website. A must read from one of England's most interesting and intelligent poets.  

27 August

Sarah Corbett

Sarah Corbett"s lecture - The Wrong Fit - examined the role of both place and people on the development of her writing. As an incomer to the calder valley, Sarah talked of the powerful impact the landscape had on her imagination and the different ways in which Sylvia Plath's and Ted Hughes' poetry affected her own development as a poet. Sarah read from The Red Wardrobe and her verse novel And She Was to demonstrate how a search for home and identity can manifest itself in moving and powerful ways in poetry. The lecture ended on an optimistic note with both a paeon to the landscape in spring around her adopted home and a homage to the nature poems of John Clare. A beautiful lecture.

24 September

Peter Riley

"Peter Riley prefers to be referred to as “writer” rather than “poet”. Born in Stockport 1940, now living in Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire, following a long period in Cambridge.” Peter Riley is author of several poetry books. His latest Due North is shortlisted for this year's Forward Prize for Poetry. Peter is a poetry book reviewer and poetry editor for The Fortnightly Review."

29 October

Ian Duhig

"Ian Duhig was the eighth of eleven children born to Irish parents with a liking for poetry. He has won the National Poetry Competition twice, and also the Forward Prize for Best Poem; his collection, The Lammas Hireling, was the Poetry Book Society's Choice for Summer 2003, and was shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize and Forward Prize for Best Collection. Chosen as a New Generation Poet in 1994, he has received Arts Council and Cholmondeley Awards, and has held various Royal Literary Fund fellowships at universities including Lancaster, Durham, Newcastle and his own alma mater, Leeds. His poetry is open to a multiplicity of subjects, from Apollinaire to Yorkshire pudding, from string vests to sutras; he has a particular gift for ignoring barriers between subjects that could be thought to be distinct.” 

26 November

Clare Shaw

"In 2006, my first poetry collection was published with Bloodaxe. In the same year, I launched a user-led self-harm training organisation. I continue to work on a freelance basis as a mental health adviser, trainer and consultant. Poetry and mental health might seem like very separate careers. They aren’t. Where they meet is in my passion for language; a passion rooted in my own experiences of lacking the right words to describe who I was, what my life was like, and what I needed. As a young person growing up in difficult circumstances, I found a means of expression in self-injury and other difficult behaviours. Later in life, I discovered how I could make language work for me; as a means of expression and communication, a way of walking in other people’s shoes, learning about – and changing - myself and the world around me.”  

17 December

John Duffy

"John Duffy was born in Glasgow and lives in Huddersfield. He works for Kirklees Libraries as a bibliotherapist, promoting reading as a mental health tool. He was a founding member of the Albert Poets, who perform alone, together and with musicians; run monthly readings in the Albert, the most venerable Huddersfield town centre pub; and run weekly workshops in the Albert and occasionally in other venues. He has run writing workshops for a wide range of community groups, including mental health service users, people with learning impairment and people affected by dementia. He has been published in Scotland and England,in Wide Skirt, West Coast, Scratch, New Writing Scotland, The North, Northlight, Northwords, Stand, Pennine Platform, Cencrastus, Radical Scotland, Lines Review, Envoi, Fatchance, Braquemard, Out From Beneath The Boot, Smiths Knoll and Verse among others and has three collections: Troika 1 (with Paul Donnelly and William Park) - Scratch 1994 Perpetual Light - Spout 1998 The Constancy of Stone - Nepotism Press 2002 The Constancy of Stone was awarded an Honorable Mention in the Writer's Digest 12th International Self-Published Book Awards."