Meet The Poet: Jenny Mitchell

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Jenny Mitchell is winner of the Aryamati Prize, the Segora Prize, a Bread and Roses Poetry Award, the Fosseway Prize, joint winner of the Geoff Stevens Memorial Prize 2019; and winner of the Folklore Prize 2020. Her poems have been published widely, and a debut collection,Her Lost Language(Indigo Dreams Publishing) is one of 44 Poetry Books for 2019 (Poetry Wales), and a Jhalak Prize #bookwelove.

A forthcoming collection,Map of a Plantation(IDP), will be published in 2021.

Twitter: @jennymitchellgo

What does your memory smell like?

Burnt toast. It’s the memory of coming home from school and fending for myself. It’s also a real reminder of my student days, going to clubs; then four hours sleep, before meeting friends in the common room for scones. University for me, as with life in general, was designed around food!

What do you want your future to taste like?

I want…

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Meet The Poet: Matthew M. C. Smith 

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Published in ‘Afterfeather’, Black Bough Poetry.

Matthew M. C. Smith is a poet from Wales. He is ‘Best of the Net’-nominated and won the R.S Thomas prize at Gwyl Cybi in 2018. His work can be read in Poetry Wales, The Lonely Crowd, Barren Magazine, Fevers of the Mind, Atrium Poetry and Arachne Press. He also edits Black Bough Poetry and Top Tweet Tuesday. His second collection will be published with Broken Spine. Matthew loves the Welsh mountains, a Spanish holiday, outdoor activities with his kids, The Doors and vintage Star Wars. You can find out more about Matthew here. On Twitter you can find him @MatthewMCSmith and @blackboughpoems

https://atriumpoetry.com/2022/03/18/living-garment-matthew-m-c-smith/

What does your memory smell like?

Spilt diesel in the baking heat. The green scent of spotting rain after weeks of drought. Cedarwood and sandalwood.

What do you want your future to taste like?

Sea-salt, crushed…

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Meet The Poet: Peach Delphine

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Differential

We cannot define voice
of absence,
teeth rattling in the cracked noggin
bouncing off my stepfather’s hand.
A child brought you flesh
flowering with salty petals
to show you her pain
you questioned nothing.

“What is pain?” asked the heron
tossing back splintered moonlight
stabbed from amber water
darkening into silence.

The cattails had no answer
what lurked beneath lily pads
less menacing than log, lightless water
or the man who smacked me
for an elbow on the table, less opaque
than silence spilling from your lips
at the breeze of violence sloughing
through your house.

It was a bandana already crimson
less obviously ruined by lacerations
coagulating leakage of an inner sea.

What is the voice, splintered
with retribution, scattered in wiregrass
burying itself beneath pine needles.

The men that loved me in my youth,
that could fold me into a letter
of pleasure posted on some shady…

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Meet The Poet: Anindita Sengupta

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Candela

                                Measure of luminous intensity

​Popsicles of foam 

& sand is warm butter On my mind:

all our ways of dying.

A bright canopy

like the breadth of sky

spreads its hands as if in welcome.

Thank you for sharing

your waking moments

with me. I never bargained

for so much closeness

with another human. Like mussel byssus,

we are hundreds of threads. As if

glued to wave-threatened rock.

Seaweed smell, its blunt

muttony stipe & kelp.

Like animals we plan a foray.

We’re living keen

as black pelican beak

which understands water

by piercing it.

Its wings embrace

the inescapable periwinkle

Two kites

rapport in the sky,

saturated & vibrant as

lemon with salt.

Anindita Sengupta is the author of Walk Like Monsters (Paperwall, 2016) and City of Water (Sahitya Akademi, 2010). She…

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Meet The Poet: Amanda McLeod

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Author photo credit: Siva Sivaraja

‘Forest School’ originally published in The Sour Collective

Amanda McLeod is a Canberra-based creative and the author of Heartbreak Autopsy (Animal Heart Press, 2021) and Animal Behaviour (Chaffinch Press, 2020). Loves: good coffee and wild places. Loathes: anthropophony. Find her on Twitter and Instagram@AmandaMWrites or at AmandaMcLeodWrites.com. If all else fails, head for the nearest river. She’s probably there. 

1.What does your memory smell like?
My memory smells like wet roads in summer, after a rainstorm. There’s also fresh cut grass, river water, and petrichor. These are the things I carry with me even when I’m not among them. At the moment I’m finding myself drawn back to nature again and again in both my writing and art (I am also an artist). It’s interesting to examine the lexicons for describing the world – humans are so visual, and I find…

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Meet The Poet: Beth Brooke

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Homesick

The wind from the south

is an old friend,

its embrace warm

like the desert.

It speaks of home,

carries to me

the scent of mint tea,

sweet and soothing,

tells me the

figs are ripening

into black sticky

sweetness

and need to be picked;

whispers that my olive trees miss me.

Beth Brookeis a retired teacher, living on the Jurassic Coast of Dorset and drawing inspiration from its landscape. She is a Quaker. She has had poems published in a variety of journals and is currently working on her first poetry collection.

Photo credit: Beth Brooke

What does memory smell like?

Figs! Well to be properly accurate the smell of fig leaves when the temperature reaches that certain point that the scent oozes out and pulls you to it. I was born in Yemen and spent several years of my childhood in Libya. We had fig trees…

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Meet The Poet: Damien Donnelly

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This poem is from my debut collection Eat the Storms published by the Hedgehog Poetry Press, you can listen to an audio version of it here and see the beautiful video of it here

DamienDonnelly, 45, Dublin born, returned to Ireland in 2019 after 23 years in Paris, London and Amsterdam, working in the fashion industry. His writing focuses on identity, sexuality and fragility. His daily interests revolve around falling over and learning how to get back up while baking cakes. His short stories have been featured in ‘Second Chance’ Original Writing, ‘Body Horror’ Gehenna & Hinnom, his poetry in ‘Nous Sommes Paris,’ Eyewear Publishing and The Runt Magazine. Online, he’s been featured in Black Bough Poetry, Coffin Bell, Barren Magazine, the Fahmidan Journal. His debut poetry collection was published by The Hedgehog Press in September 2020 when he also began a poetry podcast Eat the Storms

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Meet The Poet: Lynn Valentine

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https://thebluenib.com/3-poems-by-lynn-valentine/

Lynn Valentine is from Arbroath but now lives on the Black Isle in the Highlands of Scotland via a life in London and Glasgow. She started writing for herself a decade ago after taking redundancy from the BBC due to ill health. From not showing anyone her writing at first, she is now widely published.

Lynn has a Scots Language pamphlet out withHedgehog PoetryPressin July of this year and will have a full poetry collection published byCinnamon Pressin 2022, after winning theCinnamon PressLiterature Award in 2020. Childlessness, mental health, nature and family all play a part in her writing; she sneaks a Labrador in there when she can.

Lynn can be found on Twitter @dizzylynn or intermittently on Instagram as twoblackdugs

What does your memory smell like?

My memories smell of paraffin oil, dog hair, Mum’s cooking and library books. I…

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Meet The Poet: Lucy Heuschen

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Photo credit: Lucy Heuschen

Lucy Heuschen is a British poet living in Germany with her family and rescue dog. She returned to writing poetry after a two-decade legal career and a life-changing cancer diagnosis. Lucy’s poetry has appeared in numerous journals and literary magazines and she has contributed to anthologies from Hedgehog Press, Dreich, Yaffle, Orchard Lea, New Contexts and Black Bough.
Lucy is the founder and editor of The Rainbow Poems (an online community for anyone experiencing life change or uncertainty) and the Sonnets for Shakespeare project. She leads the Poetry Society Stanza for Germany.
Visit www.therainbowpoems.co.uk or connect with Lucy on Twitter @Rainbow_Poems or Facebook @RainbowPoemsUK.

To buy a print copy, an e-copy or a signed copy of We Wear The Crown in aid of Macmillan Cancer Support: www.therainbowpoems.co.uk

What does your memory smell like?

My childhood memory: dogs, horses and my grandmother Kathleen.

Grandma had a…

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NEW FEATURE: SYNERGY: CALLING ALL WRITERS WHO ARE PHOTOGRAPHERS I will feature your work photos and writing individually on the Wombwell Rainbow. A special feature for you alone. Please DM/message me if you’re interested. Photo essays are great, poems should accompany one of your images that inspired them. Poems within the photos are also great, such a haiku, and so forth. Any theme you choose, at the moment. May get more specific as time goes by. Experimental work most welcome. Our eighth Synergy is from Sheryl Singleton Lynch

Queens Reflections Photo Essay

Sheryl lynch photo number 1

21st Century woman
Slips outside her door
At the midnight hour
To feed the birds
(She wouldn’t want to wake them)
To find space to think
Just she and the moon
In a slice of solitude
And the city fades away into the night.

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Search for moonlight
Waiting impatiently
For a diaphanous cloud.

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Hoping to have my name in the Book of Life
I throw money at society’s problems
But find no catharsis
Hate greed and corruption persist
Purging may require
The effort of presence and perseverance

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Can I take
Just one bite
Of this alien life
Without succumbing
To its spell
Forfeiting myself
And all I love?
Nothing ventured, the Snake said

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I live on a street
With a number
The kids say its meaning
Is homicide
I’ve never done that crime
And yet the dead are all around me
You don’t have to shoot ‘em
Stab ‘em
Poison ‘em
Just live long enough
And Time will do the deed.

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SPITE

Women on this street
Plant flowers just to spite
The urban concrete.

 

Bio and Links

-Sheryl Singleton Lynch

is a poet and essayist who lives in New York City.  Her work has appeared in several journals, as well as in seven self-published collections available through Amazon, the latest, Folks and The Adventures of Lovemore Fearless (In No Particular Order) were released Summer 2022. In a previous life Sheryl worked as a telecommunications specialist and still shows signs of being a “nerdy girl.” Visit her website at sherylsingletonlynch.weebly.com.