Leia is a tea-lover, procrastinator, and creator. Her most recent poetry can be found in Streetcake Magazine, Acropolis Journal and Roi Fainéant Press. She has poetry collections with Broken Sleep Books and Stanchion and Steel Incisors. Links: Bluesky at @leiabutler.bsky.social Website at https://leiabutler.com/
Sue Spiers works with Winchester Poetry Festival. Her poems appear with Atrium, The High Window, The Lake and Ink, Sweat & Tears and print magazines. Sue won the Shepton Mallet prize 2024 and Hedgehog Press’s Little Black Book #2 competitions.
Roy Marshall lives in Leicestershire where he works in adult education. His books are The Sun bathers (2013), The Great Animator (2017) and After Montale (2019). A new collection of poems, Light Work, will be published by Shoestring Press later this year.
Nia Broomhall’s debut pamphlet Backalong won the Mslexia Pamphlet Prize 2023 and she won the Poetry Society’s Hamish Canham Award in 2024. Nia is Poet in Residence at Painshill Park in Surrey and co-Head of English at a comprehensive school. www.niabroomhall.co.uk
Neil won the Cinnamon Press debut collection prize with The Space Between Us, as well as their pamphlet prize with Codes of Conduct. Plenty of poems have followed in all sorts of mags and journals. He occasionally writes at https://neilelderpoetry.wordpress.com/
Maria, from Liverpool, creates Coast to Coast to Coast. Writer in residence for Mersey Care NHS Trust, Maria has published six pamphlets – the latest, winner of Litfest/ Wayeave Competition is Subcutaneous (2025, Wayleave Press) and a collaborative pamphlet with John Glenday.
Alice Stainer teaches English Literature and Creative Writing to visiting undergraduates in Oxford. Recent work appears in Dust, Bad Lilies and Under the Radar and her debut pamphlet Headlands came out in September 2024 as a winner in the Live Canon competition.
Niall M Oliver resides in Ireland with his wife and sons. His poems have appeared in Acumen, Atrium, The Honest Ulsterman, and he is the author of ‘We Will Eat Breakfast With Our Children’ by Nine Pens Poetry Press.
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.
Our featured publication for Summer is How to Leave a Body by Holly Winter-Hughes, published by Verve Poetry Press.
‘Holly Winter-Hughes’ visceral writing turns the human form inside-out, mapping the contours of trauma, abuse and hard-won resilience. It urges the reader to follow and ‘Breathe deep to the creak of your heartwood’. Darkly imaginative and pearled with fresh phrase-making, these are poems that compel attention and linger.‘ John McCullough
‘Holly’s poetry leaves red shapes on my skin, and teeth marks. Unapologetically incandescent images twist tightly and then open into wide, revelatory spaces. The thin blade of a plastic- handled knife flashes in the dark of cold-roomed poems, but beside my shoulder as I read there is always an older, kinder spirit. It says, ‘Look – this, yes, and this.’ And yet, somehow, the spirit is still singing. I love this collection.‘ Tom Hirons
‘Holly writes with the whiplash of thunder.’ Antony Owen
‘An electrifying poet with Plath-like power and potency. Such fire!‘ Anna Saunders
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Straight Girls Are Easier to Imitate
Previously published in Impossible Archetype
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Thin Air
Previously published in Clarion
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How to Find Your Way Home
Previously published in Lapidus Magazine
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Holly Winter-Hughes is especially passionate about using writing to express the stories we hold in our bodies. This comes through in both her poetry and her facilitation. Her work has been commissioned by various organisations including Apples & Snakes, Live & Local and Arvon. She has performed extensively across the UK including at Ledbury Poetry Festival, for Raise the Bar, for Cheltenham Poetry Festival and for the BBC. She is passionate about raising the voices of underrepresented people and as such, is the founder and CEO of The Word Association CIC (who have published over 30 anthologies from marginalised communities). She is currently studying for a Masters degree in Creative Writing for Therapeutic Purposes, and starts her PhD in restorying the body in autumn 2025 at University of Birmingham. Holly is a widely published writer, most recently appearing in Atrium, Clarion, Impossible Archetype, Ink, Sweat & Tears, Lapidus and Tears in the Fence.
Copies of How to Leave a Body are available to purchase from the Verve Poetry Press website, or directly from Holly Winter-Hughes, here.