Four Poets: Atkinson, Boast, Evans-Bush & Horovitz
Join us for an evening of poetry, just when we need it most. Celebrating new pamphlets by Rachael Boast (TIMESLIPS, Clutag Press) and Adam Horovitz (Prayer Songs for Flesh & Future, Yew Tree Press), Katy Evans-Bush's 2024 collection (Joe Hill Makes His Way into the Castle, CB Editions), and friendship.
A free event on Zoom, Wednesday 4 December, at 8pm. Come along, pour a glass of something, and relax! We'll have time for a bit of socialising after the readings.
Tiffany Atkinson's latest collection Lumen (Bloodaxe 2021) was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation and winner of the Medicine Unboxed Creative Prize. She received the Cholmondeley Award for Poetry in 2022. She lives in Norwich and is Professor of Creative Writing (Poetry) at The University of East Anglia.
Rachael Boast is a British poet and author of four collections, most recently, Hotel Raphael (Picador). She is co-editor of The Echoing Gallery: Bristol Poets and Art in the City (Redcliffe Press), The Caught Habits of Language: An Entertainment for W.S. Graham for Him Having Reached One Hundred (Donut Press), and editor of Versus Versus: 100 Poems by Deaf, Disabled and Neurodivergent Poets, due from Bloodaxe Books in May 2025. A new pamphlet, TIMESLIPS, is available from Clutag Press.
Katy Evans-Bush's latest collection is Joe Hill Makes His Way into the Castle (CB Editions). She is the author of two previous collections with Salt, Forgive the Language (essays) with Penned in the Margins, and the Smith|Doorstop pamphlet Broken Cities. She writes a Substack called A Room of Someone Else’s, and works as a freelance editor and poetry tutor.
Adam Horovitz’s latest release is Prayer Songs for Flesh and Future, a pamphlet from Yew Tree Press. He has released three collections of poetry, Turning (Headland), The Soil Never Sleeps (Palewell) and Love and Other Fairy Tales (Indigo Dreams), plus a memoir and a CD of poetry and music. He was one of the poets featured on Cerys Matthews and Hidden Orchestra’s album We Come from the Sun (Decca).