Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Cambridge Series Poetry Readings Jan 26th

The next in the Cambridge Series Poetry Readings takes place this Thursday January 26th at St John's College (New Music Room, First Court) at 8pm.

Linh Dinh, Randolph Healy and Fiona Sampson will be reading, tickets are £3/£2 concessions, and wine will be served. At that price, it sounds too good to pass up if you're in that part of the world, especially if there's going to be wine!

DIRECTIONS:
The New Music Room is in First Court, St John's College. Entrance to the college will be through the forecourt entrance, past the porters lodge, turn left and move into Second court, turn left and move into First court.
Here is a map of the location of the college, and here is a map of the college itself.

THE POETS:
Randolph Healy was born in 1956. He lives on the Dublin Wicklow Border with his wife Louise and their five children. In 1997 he started Wild Honey Press which has published 49 chapbooks so far including work by Pam Brown, Mairead Byrne, Ric Caddel, Alison Croggon, Allen Fisher, Jill Jones, Trevor Joyce, John Kinsella, Rachel Loden, Karen MacCormack, David Miller, Billy Mills, Joan Retallack, Peter Riley, Ron Silliman,  Geoffrey Squires, Rosmarie and Keith Waldrop and Susan Wheeler among others. His selected poems _Green 532_ is available from Salt.

Fiona Sampson has published twelve books: four poetry collections, philosophy of language and books on writing process.  She has won many awards, including the international Zlaten Prsten (Macedonia, 2003); and been published in fifteen languages.  Her books in translation include The Self on the Page (Hebrew, 2002), Travel Diary (Macedonian, 2003), Folding the Real (Romanian, 2004) and The Distance Between Us (Romanian, Macedonian, 2005).  She is the Editor of Poetry Review.

Linh Dinh is the author of two collections of stories, Fake House (Seven Stories Press 2000) and Blood and Soap (Seven Stories Press 2004), and three books of poems, All Around What Empties Out (Tinfish 2003), American Tatts (Chax 2005) and Borderless Bodies (Factory School 2005). His work has been anthologized in Best American Poetry 2000, Best American Poetry 2004 and Great American Prose Poems from Poe to the Present, among other places. He is also the editor of the anthologies Night, Again: Contemporary Fiction from Vietnam (Seven Stories Press 1996) and Three Vietnamese Poets (Tinfish 2001), and translator of Night, Fish and Charlie Parker, the poetry of Phan Nhien Hao (Tupelo 2006). Linh Dinh is living in Norwich, England, as a David T.K. Wong fellow at the University of East Anglia.

Presented with the generous support of the Judith E Wilson Fund (Faculty of English), St John's College, and Barque Press.

See Cambridge Poetry for further details
or email contact @ cambridgepoetry.org 

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