I'm a poet based in Worcestershire, UK. My poetry has appeared in print and online magazines including The Interpreter's House, Prole, Ink Sweat and Tears, And Other Poems, Clear Poetry, and Amaryllis, and in anthologies such as The Chronicles of Eve (Paper Swans Press).
My first pamphlet, The Girl Who Grew Into a Crocodile, is published by V. Press.
I'm a Poetry Reader for Three Drops Press, and Co-Editor of Atrium poetry webzine.
Parmentier presents his case for the potato to Louis XV
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Susannah Hart’s first collection Out of True won the 2018 Live Canon First Collection Prize. Susannah won the 2019 National Poetry Competition, is on the board of Magma Poetry and a member of the Poetry in Aldeburgh Organising Committee.
Tim Love’s publications are a poetry pamphlet “Moving Parts” (HappenStance) and a story collection “By all means” (Nine Arches Press). He lives in Cambridge, UK. His poetry has appeared in Magma, Rialto, Stand, The High Window, Oxford Poetry, etc. He blogs at http://litrefs.blogspot.com/ Bsky: @TimLoveWriter Facebook: www.facebook.com/tim.love.315
Elizabeth Osmond is a poet and neonatal doctor. Her work has been published online and in print, including previously in Atrium. In 2021 and 2024 she won prizes in the Hippocrates poetry competition. She is working on her first collection. @bethosmond.bsky.social
Oz Hardwick is a European poet and academic, focusing mainly on prose poetry, who has published “a dozen or so” collections, most recently Retrofuturism for the Dispossessed (Hedgehog, 2024). He is Professor of Creative Writing at Leeds Trinity University. www.ozhardwick.co.uk
Smitha Sehgal is a legal professional and a bilingual poet who writes in English and Malayalam. A Best of the Net nominee, her poems have been featured by Ink Sweat & Tears, Osiris Poetry, Temz Review, The Indianapolis Review and elsewhere. She’s the author of ‘How Women Become Poems in Malabar’ ( Red River, 2023)
Sophia Argyris is of British-Greek origin. Her work has appeared in Magma, Poetry London, Poetry Wales, and Under the Radar, and been placed in the Verve and Welshpool competitions. Her pamphlet ‘Heronless’ was published by Palewell Press in March 2025.
John is a group psychotherapist and an independent psycho-socialist researcher. He lives in Brixton and works in what’s left of NHS mental health services in South London. He is affiliated to the Survivors’ Poetry collective, and blogs as Barrelman https://barrelblog.org/
Laura Strickland is a carer from Yorkshire. Her work has appeared in The North, Ink, Sweat and Tears, Dreamcatcher, Northern Gravy, Strix, The Frogmore Papers and Butcher’s Dog. She was longlisted in the National Poetry Competition 2023.
Our featured publication for Spring is The Price of Happiness by Nikki Robson, published by V. Press.
‘The Price of Ηappiness neither holds back nor wastes a word in its tale of a marriage from unsettling omens (‘Goodness, I’m weeping said Mum’) to full-blown violent coerciveness (‘the sore in the wall/where the dinner was thrown’) and out through the numbness and the decree absolute to the glimmers of a new life (‘it crackled like fireworks,/illegal for so long’). You barely take a breath before you’re holding it in shock at the damage we do each other in the altogether too close up of a dysfunctional relationship. It is a tribute to Nikki Robson’s skill that this is accomplished without sentiment, catching our attention and our compassion entirely through telling detail and command of phrasing – these poems are constantly quotable in their exactitude – ‘my label of a husband’; ‘my mummy-smile’; ‘this Vitruvian boy’ – and are nowhere more moving than in their grasp of the impact on the children: ‘[I] tried to describe the end of her world/as the beginning of another’.‘ W. N. Herbert
‘‘The divorced cannot/bury their dead.’ Nikki Robson scours that truth, asks where it leads. We are used to graphic detonations of trauma, but here, the poet, well able to apply her ‘mummy-smile’, layers words, finds metaphor, draws deeply on sources and places. Unfolding her narrative, she never neglects a poet’s first responsibility: to language. These poems haunt as mere shock cannot.‘ Beth McDonough
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Signature dish
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Omens?
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Bone-weary
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First Laugh
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Nikki Robson was born and raised in Northern Ireland between Tyrone and Fermanagh, where she still regularly spends time with family and friends. Following 25 years in Scotland, she now lives in Suffolk. After a career in business, she obtained an MLitt in Writing Study and Practice from Dundee University. Her writing often explores relationships, place, associations and the idea of home, with poems published in many journals and anthologies. The Price of Happiness is her first pamphlet.
Copies of The Price of Happiness are available to purchase from the V. Press website, here.