Dawn Gorman believes poetry should be everywhere - puts it on beermats,
uses it to
work with people with memory loss, facilitates writing workshops,
organises poetry
events and runs international poetry competitions. She is
widely published, and has
performed in New York, Paris, London - and lots of
smaller places in between.
“Poetry isn't a profession, it's a way of life. It's an empty basket;
you put
your life into it and make something out of that.”
Mary Oliver
Guest Poet: Kevan Manwaring
Kevan Manwaring has been writing poetry since 1991, and this summer published a collection bringing together work from over a quarter of a century (Silver Branch: bardic poems, from Awen Publications). He is the author of fiction (The Windsmith Elegy; Oxfordshire Folk Tales; Ballad Tales) and non-fiction (The Bardic Handbook; Lost Islands; Turning the Wheel). He is a lecturer in creative writing for the Open University, and has recently completed a PhD in Creative Writing at the University of Leicester. He blogs and tweets as the Bardic Academic. A keen walker, his poetry is informed by his love of the landscape, myth and legend.