The Over
The Edge March Writers’ Gathering presents readings by visiting and Galway poets. Christopher
Locke, Enda Coyle Greene, Alan Jude Moore, Bernie Crawford, Kevin O’Shea & Marie
Cadden will read their work at The Kitchen @ The Museum, Spanish
Arch, Galway on Friday, March 14th, 8pm.
Christopher
Locke was born in Laconia, New Hampshire in 1968. He is
the author of the poetry collections How To Burn (Adastra Press, 1995), Slipping
Under Diamond Light (Clamp Down Press, 2002), Possessed (Editor’s
Choice Award, Main Street Rag Press, 2005), The Temple of Many Hands (Dead
Drunk Dublin Press, 2010), End of American Magic (Salmon Poetry,
2010), Waiting For Grace & Other
Poems (Turning Point, 2013) and the memoir Can I Say (Kattywompus
Press, 2013). Billy Collins says Locke’s poetry will have you “helplessly
engaged.”
Enda
Coyle-Greene was born in Dublin where she still
lives. She has published widely in
journals and anthologies in Ireland and elsewhere and is also a frequent
contributor on RTE radio. The manuscript
of her first collection poems, Snow
Negatives, won the Patrick Kavanagh award in 2006 and was published by the Dedalus
Press the following year. Her second
collection, Map of the Last, also
from Dedalus, was published in 2013.
Alan
Jude Moore is the author of four
collections of poetry: Black State Cars (Salmon Publishing,
2004), Lost Republics (Salmon Poetry, 2008), Strasbourg (Salmon
Poetry, 2010) and Zinger (Salmon Poetry, 2013). Widely published
in Ireland and abroad, he has read at venues around the world including The
Troubadour Club (London), Riflessidiversi (Umbria, Italy), The Nabokov
Museum (St. Petersburg), The Henry Miller Memorial Library (California) and the
Istanbul International Poetry Festival (Turkey). He is co-editor of the
online literary magazine The Burning Bush
2. He lives in Dublin.
Bernie Crawford won the 2013 Galway Rape
Crisis Centre Poetry competition, judged by Clare Daly TD and Kevin Higgins.
Bernie is one of the editors of the Skylight
47 poetry paper, probably Ireland’s most interesting poetry publication.
Kevin O’Shea
won the 2012 Cúirt New Writing Prize for Poetry. His first collection of poetry, The Art of Non-Fishing, was published by
Doire Press in 2012. Kevin is one of the editors of Skylight 47.
Marie Cadden won the 2011 Cúirt New Writing Prize for Poetry. Her satirical poem, ‘Mammogram’,
is a contemporary classic. She is an editor of Skylight 47.
There is no entrance fee. All welcome. For further information contact 087-6431748.
There is no entrance fee. All welcome. For further information contact 087-6431748.
Over The Edge acknowledges the ongoing generous financial support of the Arts Council and Galway City Council.