Amy Jo Philip

  • Sleepers. A fine idea if you can book a berth but a complete misnomer if cash and demand force you into a recliner (read “seat that hardly moves back”) for the eight-hour journey. And my seat on the way down to London was the worst possible option: right next to the door to the toilet…

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  • Sampler Review

    Sorlil has very kindly reviewed my sampler on her blog. As far as I know, it’s the first review of this pamphlet and I’m very pleased with what she has to say about it. She comments: “These poems are unlike most of the poems I read these days, there is something very different and at…

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  • Angus Calder

    As other bloggers have already noted, Angus Calder has died. I can’t claim to have known him well, but he was a kenspeckle character on the Edinburgh poetry scene and a fine writer. I have clear memories of him reading “Deer on the High Hills” at an event to celebrate Iain Crichton Smith and of…

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  • LBF on Facebook

    Linlithgow Book Festival now has a Facebook presence. With the full programme listed there, it’s a great way for Facebookers to keep up to date with what’s happening with West Lothian’s literary festival.

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  • The audience for Sunday’s Shore Poets was a little thinner than usual, possibly because of the holiday weekend. Music was provided by Just Voices, a four-part acapella group, who treated us to French, Bulgarian, Scots and American songs. Beautiful stuff. Stephanie Green kicked off the poetry in the newcomer slot. I’ve seen Stephanie around the…

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  • Back from London and, after two less than restful nights on the sleeper (the one on the way down was by far the worse) completely puggelt. Proper reports of Sunday’s Shore Poets and last night’s reading in due course, but suffice to say it was a cracker of a night.

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  • Sampled!

    Andrew Philip: A Sampler came through the post today, 12 author copies of a slim, simple and elegant pamphlet–slightly to my surprise, as I wasn’t expecting to see it before the Troubadour reading. And a lovely surprise, too: Helena Nelson has, naturally, done a fantastic job on it and it feels beautiful in the hand.…

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  • The final poem in the pre-Troubadour series is by Helena Nelson, founder and editor of HappenStance press. It is very much in the spirit of her wonderfully quirky and deliciously, irreverantly playful pamphlet Unsuitable Poems. LikeI was like Read this poemHe was like You must be jokingI was like PleeeeaseHe was like Fancy a drink?…

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  • Mirrorball

    Less than a week to go to the Troubadour reading, and there’s already another HappenStance date in the diary: several HappenStance poets–including myself, Patricia Ace, James Wood, Eleanor Livingstone and Margaret Christie–will be reading at St Mungo’s Mirrorball on Thursday 2nd October. Full line-up and more details nearer the time but, for the moment, those…

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  • Originally, I wasn’t going to post one of my own poems in this series, but I’ve changed my mind and am posting a piece from Tonguefire that hasn’t appeared anywhere else. Pedestrian Someone was standing in the middle of the road.She stood astride it, just beyondthe blind spot on a sharp, countryside bend,so hidden that…

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  • Martin Cook’s life has included soldiering, tea planting, advertising, marketing and social work–the kind of CV that once was almost de rigeur for a poet. His pamphlet, Mackerel Wrappers, was published in 2007. FallingAfter Chagall’s Los Novios del la Torre Eiffel We should never have climbed that phallus.We were, after all, Brits and when you…

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  • Not having been out in Glasgow for absolutely ages–possibly not since I read at Tchai Ovna west end in 2006, unless you count the Mitchell event Helena Nelson and I did with the Scottish Poetry Library–I really enjoyed heading west to join the audience for the reading at Tchai Ovna southside on Friday night. I…

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  • Eleanor Livingstone is artistic director of the StAnza poetry festival. Her chapbook, The Last King of Fife, from which “The Monimail Spider” is taken, was published by HappenStance in 2005. More recently, she edited Migraasje, migration o words, a pamphlet of Scots and Shetlandic versions of Frisian poems, published to accompany the reading by Frisian…

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  • Listed

    Just a quickie to say the HappenStance Troubadour gig is now listed on the Troubadour site‘s programme pages. Can’t quite believe I’ll be heading down to London for it in a fortnight’s time! Last time I was in the city was in 2003 for a Keith Jarrett Trio gig. So much has happened since then,…

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  • Gregory Leadbetter has been an environmental lawyer, worked in TV production and written TV drama; he is currently researching Samuel Taylor Coleridge. His pamphlet, The Body in the Well, was published by HappenStance in 2007. The ScientistAll this talk travels years ahead of him,a laughing gas in the air-conditioningat the Royal Society and the British…

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