Rob A Mackenzie

  • What can I say about Wednesday night’s launch of The Ambulance Box and The Opposite of Cabbage at the Scottish Poetry Library that isn’t already in the reports by Peggy at the SPL (who does the name dropping for us), Colin Will and Rob himself? Rob is right to say it couldn’t have gone any

    Read more →

  • Last night’s launch at the SPL was a huge success. We ran out of seating and wine glasses though not wine, I’m glad to say. Or books, I’m equally glad to say, despite the goodly number sold. Really, though, I’m far too tired to give you a proper account tonight. I had an unavoidably a

    Read more →

  • Several weeks back, Rob A Mackenzie and I struggled through snow to the HQ of Anon magazine, now edited by Colin Fraser and Peggy Hughes, to record for the Anon podcast. You can now hear us discuss our magazine publishing history, the whys and joys of blogging, and the parlous poetry infrastructure of the best

    Read more →

  • After the success of Thursday’s Mirrorball launch, I’m very much looking forward to the launch for Rob A Mackenzie‘s book and mine on Wednesday at the Scottish Poetry Library. It’ll be a bigger affair than Mirrorball, I suspect. There’ll be wine and crisps (oooh, the extravagence!), and both of us will read. I’ve not yet

    Read more →

  • Mirrorball

    Thursday’s reading at St Mungo’s Mirrorball with Rob A Mackenzie and performance poet Robin Cairns was a good night. As usual, Mr Mackenzie has got in ahead of me and blogged about it already. As he says, it was a varied evening but the audience was happy to switch mood and style along with each

    Read more →

  • As a further celebration of the Appointed Day for Rob A Mackenzie and me, here’s a poem from Rob’s collection, The Opposite of Cabbage, originally published in Seam: Nuclear Submarines One day they will surely betray me.For now, they seem content to drowse resolutely without wit or purposelike autistic sharks ballooning through seaweed, rock and

    Read more →

  • The day has come! Today, 1 March 2009, is the official publication date for The Ambulance Box and Rob A Mackenzie‘s marvellous book, The Opposite of Cabbage. To celebrate, here’s the title poem from my collection: The Ambulance Box No one can swear how it fellinto our hands. No one can fathom its substance or

    Read more →

  • Triple Decker

    The Month of Book Launches is nearly upon me! First up is a triple launch: myself, fellow Scottish Salter Rob A Mackenzie and performance poet Robin Cairns. An eclectic mix, hosted by St Mungo’s Mirrorball in Glasgow. If you’re in the vicinity, come along. The reading is free, and there will be books to buy.

    Read more →

  • Front Page News

    Just spotted that Rob A Mackenzie’s The Opposite of Cabbage and my collection The Ambulance Box are both now on the front page of the Salt website. Rob is beneath Keats, and I’m under Vincent De Souza. Rob also has his first review, at the blog of Tony Williams, whose collection is due out from

    Read more →

  • It’s fairly pointless to say this, as it’s blindingly obvious, but I’ve added the cover image for The Ambulance Box to the sidebar. Apparently, the collection is also one of several Salt books to feature in a back-page ad in the latest issue of the LRB!* I haven’t seen it yet as Linlithgow shops don’t

    Read more →

  • I was jealous that Rob Mackenzie had got his books yesterday, so I just had to get up early this morning and zip down to the postal depot to pick up my author copies of The Ambulance Box, which the postman had failed to leave in our designated “safe place” yesterday. I wasn’t quite banging

    Read more →

  • Gone to Press!

    A quick update on the progress of The Ambulance Box: the book went to press on Friday! I can tell you, that was an exciting moment. It was made even better by the fact that I shared it with Rob A Mackenzie, whose collection The Opposite of Cabbage was sent to press at the same

    Read more →

  • Rob Mackenzie has blogged about using personas and characters in his poetry. One of the points he discusses is the degree to which a reader is likely to equate the I of a poem written in the first person with the writer. Anyone who writes in a persona — anyone who writes, I suspect —

    Read more →

  • That’s got to have been the best wee festival in the world we had the weekend before last. What a cracker LBF 08 was! Fiona Hyslop, the Scottish Government education secretary and a Lithgae resident, launched the festival and christened our new participants autograph book. She stayed around for Christopher Brookmyre‘s sell-out event. There was

    Read more →

  • Mick Imlah, Kathryn Simmonds and Don Paterson. No real surprise on the main Forward prize and possibly not an enormous surprise on the best poem prize, but Kathyrn Simmonds’s win in the best first collection category seems to have been unexpected. To be honest, I can’t really comment, not having read any of the winners

    Read more →