











BIO: Whiskey Radish @WhiskeyRadish leads an uneventful (outer) life in an uneventful (real) town. Whiskey R. is seeking a crack agent to represent her work.












BIO: Whiskey Radish @WhiskeyRadish leads an uneventful (outer) life in an uneventful (real) town. Whiskey R. is seeking a crack agent to represent her work.
Podcast available on Spotify, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Anchor, Breaker and many more platforms
The 4th episode was a happy Host of Hoglets as I was accompanied by poets all with collections published by The Hedgehog Poetry Press who published my debut collection, also called Eat the Storms. On the show was Nigel Kent reading poems from his collections Saudade and Psychopthogen, Patricia M Osborne reading from Taxus Baccata, Gaynor Kane reading her from collection Venus in Pink Marble, Katie Proctor reading from Seasons, Brendon Booth-Jones reading from his collection Vertigo to Go, Zoe Sîobhan Howarth-Lowe reading from her collection I Have Grown Two Hearts and Margaret Royall reading from her forthcoming collection Where Flora Sings. In between I read poems from Eat the Storms and three extra poems based on my days living in Amsterdam.
Below is a link to The Hedgehog Poetry Press whee you can find all…
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Podcast is available on Spotify, Google Podcasts, Overcast, Anchor, Bleaker and Apple Podcasts and many more platforms.
The 2nd episode of Eat the Storms, The Podcast, aired on 11th September and featured my very first guest, Belfast born poet Gaynor Kane who joined me to share poems from her latest collection, Venus in Pink Marble, also published by The Hedgehog poetry Press. During this episode I also share poems from my collection Eat the Storms, read a poem of mine that appeared in the 1st issue of the Fahmidan Journal and read two poems which were inspired by the Cobh Readers and Writers Twitter poetry prompts during Lockdown.

Venus in Pink Marble, the latest collection from Gaynor Kane is available on her website…
Podcast is available on Spotify, Google Podcasts, Overcast, Anchor, Bleaker and Apple Podcasts and many more platforms.
The 3rd podcast on the 19th Sept 2020 was the 1st episode to feature bumper to bumper amazing guest artists from all around the world. From Aotearoa to Cobh in Country Cork, in Ireland, this almost hour-long feature was a delight to put together and listen to. On this show was Ankh Spice, Eilín de Paor, Aisling Keogh Catherine Ann Cullen, Kevin Bateman, Sarah Connor, Ruairí de Barra and Jane Dougherty (all available on Twitter). This was also the launch week for my debut collection Eat the Storms, published by The Hedgehog Poetry Press and I was so fortunate to be surrounded by the poets I love, respect and admire…
My debut pamphlet poetry collection Eat The Storms is available to buy here…
My debut poetry pamphlet collection is called Eat the Storms and was published on the 17th September 2020 by The Hedgehog Poetry Press. In 2019, while still living in Paris, I was one of three winners of the White Label Debut Poetry Pamphlet Collection and this collection is that winning dream come to life.
‘I wanted to draw the sound of the moon on a sun-drenched beach…’ that is the 1st line from the 1st poem in this collection and that is what I was looking for; to capture those impossible moments when the senses are confused as to which one should be working. To stand in a darkened room and still see a spark of light so as to not completely disappear into only sadness. To see fragility as not something weak or wearisome but as something as precious as the marbled perfume of the ocean as its waves…
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I can remember, creeping down the stairs, after midnight, my parents sleeping, my heart trying to break out of my ribcage, turning on the tv as the sound of my breath rose beyond control, turning down the volume and clicking on to Channel 4 to watch Derek Jarman’s Sebastiane as nerves stuck like knives in my belly and skin shivered like I’d been dropped in the middle of Antarctica, naked. But all this means I can completely relate to the line in David Hanlon’s debut collection that reads ‘the film held my hand like a parent holds the small child’s at the seaside as they take their first steps into vast unknown waters.’
And that water returns, throughout this collection, ‘I was the slow drip of a leaky sink faucet’ but its flow is not that of a steady stream, for nothing is that easy for anyone that ‘only came…
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Podcast available on Spotify, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Anchor, Breaker and many more platforms
This episode aired on 10th October 2020 and we shared poems about flights, dreams, strengths, coming home and dualities. I was joined by Julie Stevens, Steve Denehan, Mari Maxwell and Sharon Larkin. The links to their websites, blogs or Twitter pages are all listed below.

To buy Quicksand by Julie Stevens (@JulesJumping on Twitter) here is the link…

For more information on Steve Denehan (Twitter as @SteverinoD) his website is…
https://stevedenehan.wixsite.com/website
You can find Mari Maxwell on Twitter as @MariMaxwell17 or at The Galway Review…

For more info on Sharon Larkin…
https://sharonlarkinjones.com/
The opening poem I read We’ll always Have, What Exactly? was published by Impspired Magazine and can be found here…
My debut collection Eat the Storms is available here…
Until…
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Podcast available on Spotify, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Anchor, Breaker and many more platforms
This episode aired on 17th October 2020, the 1st month birthday of my debut collection Eat the Storms published by The Hedgehog Poetry Press and I was joined by poets Anna Saunders, Paul Brookes, Devon Marsh and Matthew M C Smith. The links to their websites, blogs or Twitter pages are all listed below…

To find Anna Saunders…
To purchase books by Anna at Indigo Dreams…

To find Paul Brookes…
https://thewombwellrainbow.com/

To Find Devon Marsh…

To Find Matthew M C Smith…
https://www.blackboughpoetry.com/matthew-m-c-smith


You can buy Deep Time Vol 1 and Vol 2 on Amazon co.uk/com
My debut collection Eat the Storms is available here…
Until next time… Stay Bloody Poetic!

Wombwell Rainbow Interviews
I am honoured and privileged that the following writers local, national and international have agreed to be interviewed by me. I gave the writers three options: an emailed list of questions or a more fluid interview via messenger, or an interview about their latest book, or a combination of these.
The usual ground is covered about motivation, daily routines and work ethic, but some surprises too. Some of these poets you may know, others may be new to you. I hope you enjoy the experience as much as I do.
Two anthologies that feature Ryan’s work
Ryan Norman (he/him)
is a writer from New York living in the Hudson Valley. Inspired by the landscape, he writes what he feels. He is a contributing editor of creative nonfiction with Barren Magazine. His work has appeared in From Whispers to Roars, XRAY Literary Magazine, Black Bough Poetry, Storgy Magazine and elsewhere. You can find him on Twitter @RyanMGNorman and an updated list of his publications at Linktree: https://linktr.ee/RyanMGNorman
The Interview
I started writing poetry when I was in high school from what I can remember. I was just playing around with words and sounds and meter. All of my early poetry was form. My first poem was published when I was 16, and it is about mythology, informed by Ovid, but about my life. Both mythology and autobiographical themes still dominate my poetry many years later, although I no longer write in verse or follow forms. Sometimes iambs pop into lines every now and again and the occasional couplet, but I write free verse. Poetry has always been a way for me to tell my story even if it is hidden behind mythologies.
2. Who introduced you to poetry?
It’s difficult to pinpoint who introduced me to poetry. I suppose my earliest encounter was books my family read to me when I was very young. Dr. Seuss. Does that count? If not then, later in the school library I have a memory of the librarian reading Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel Silverstein, although none of that inspired me to write poetry. I was writing stories at young age.
3. How aware are and were you of the dominating presence of older poets traditional and contemporary?
It’s difficult not to be aware of these famous poets. I’ve read them willingly and for class assignments. In my early years of writing, while I was finding my voice, if I’ve truly found it, I imitated the styles of both traditional and contemporary poets.
4. What is your daily writing routine?
My daily writing routine doesn’t involve much writing. There are days when I note things. There are days when I write. Other times I just think about writing as a sort of brainstorming process. I need to feel inspired to write. Most of what I write comes from a stream of conscious practice. Some of it is deliberately written with line breaks.
5. What subjects motivate you to write?
I write what needs to be released from my mind. A lot of what I write about is confessional or, at the very least, autobiographical. I write about mental health, relationships, moments in time, mythology. If it involves my experience, I will write about it. Essentially, it is whatever I need to get off my chest at the moment. If it isn’t too revealing, I will pursue publishing that. Even if it is revealing, I will pursue publishing, because I believe in high stakes writing. It’s something I find interesting.
6. What is your work ethic?
I’ve always worked hard for what I have. My work goes through several rounds of edits until I’m happy with it.
7. How do the writers you read when you were young influence your work today?
I would say my biggest influences are Plath and Whitman for different reasons. I’ve always been interested in Plath for her skilled phrasing, and that is putting it very simply. I most closely relate to confessional poetry, and if you were to read my poetry or essays, for the most part you would notice that I toy with stakes. When am I sharing too much? Is what I’m portraying uncomfortable for readers? I’m by no means comparing myself to Plath, someone I find immensely talented. She is just an influence. As for Whitman, I do take influence from Leaves of Grass in particular. It was a very influential collection I read when I was young, but I in no way have the meanderings of a transcendentalist. But I do have a poem coming out called ‘Breaking Ground’ that is a little in the school of transcendentalism, but much more brief than a Whitman musing.
8. Whom of today’s writers do you admire the most and why?
I honestly do not read modern poets. Shame on me. I support friends’ work.
9. Why do you write, as opposed to doing anything else?
Writing is the easiest way of expressing myself. It is something I have excelled at, not to say I’m an excellent creative writer, but as a means of communicating my ideas, writing is the best way for me to get my point across. I was naturally drawn to writing.
10. What would you say to someone who asked you “How do you become a writer?”
Certainly, you can learn the technical aspects of writing. Take a workshop. Take a class. If you want to pursue something you are passionate about, go for it. Practice. Find people to read for you who will be honest. Just write.
11. Tell me about the writing projects you have on at the moment.
I’m querying a chapbook. I’m planning a new chapbook. I’m working on a collection of essays. I would love to find a place that takes hybrid collections, because I have an idea for an essay/poem collection, and I’m always working on a memoir. There are things going on that are sometimes overwhelming, but I will get through my ideas one checkmark at a time.