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Booking information

Duration: five fortnightly sessions
Dates: 2nd May, 16th May, 30th May, 13th June and 27th June
Type: Course
Level: Open to all
Location: North East

Details

Start date: Wednesday 2nd May 2012
Session times: Wednesdays, fortnightly 7-0pm
Cost:
Full cost:£63.00
60+:£50.00
Concs:£38.00

 

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Face to face

*A Spring Book: On Waking

What is it like to be leaved, winged,legged? Is it awkward? ‘Awkward’ - is that onomatopoeic? Can words enact? Can poetry enact? Why not come and do as the Psalmist advises - taste and see? And read and write and talk about poems. There’ll be practical advice and supportive critical responses to your work. The course is open to everyone, no matter how little or large your experience of poetry may be.

Tutor:

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Gillian Allnutt

Gillian Allnutt has published 7 major poetry collections: Spitting the Pips Out (1981); Beginning the Avocado (1987); Blackthorn (1994); Nantucket and the Angel (1997); Lintel (2001); Sojourner (2004); and How The Bicycle Shone: New and Selected Poems (2007). Nantucket and the Angel and Lintel were both shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize. She is also the co-editor of The New British Poetry, 1968-1988 (1988) and is the author of Berthing: A Poetry Workbook (1991).

A Royal Literary Fund Fellow from 2001-2003, Gillian Allnutt teaches Creative Writing, currently at Newcastle University. She lives in Co. Durham.

 

Gillian Allnutt was born on 15 January 1949 in London, but spent much of her childhood in Newcastle upon Tyne. She was educated at Newnham College, Cambridge and the University of Sussex.

Since 1973 she has taught English and Creative Writing in London and Newcastle upon Tyne, and has also worked as a performer, publisher, journalist and freelance editor. She was a collective member of Sheba Feminist Publishers (1981-3), and from 1983 to 1988 was Poetry Editor at City Limits magazine.

About the venue

 

Access Information

Alington House Community Association has a good drop-off point close to its entrance. There is a lift to upper floors and sufficient spaces for wheelchair users in the rooms used. The toilets are fully equipped for disabled users. The routes between key destinations in the building are clear and signposted. For more information please contact the Alington House Community Association via their website or by phone.

 

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