Marius Kociejowski (born 1949) is a Canadian-born poet, essayist and travel writer.
Kociejowski was born in 1949 in Bishop's Mills, Ontario, to a Polish father and an English mother. In 1973, he left Canada and later settled in London. [1] His first publication, Coast, won the Cheltenham Prize for Literature in 1991. [2] He works as an antiquarian bookseller specializing in poetry. [3] His interest in Syria has led him to research and write two books about the country, [4] and edit a Syrian anthology of travel writing. His book God's Zoo (2014) consists of a series of encounters with creative artists living in London who have become exiles from their cultural and geographical roots. [5]
William Sydney Graham was a Scottish poet, who was often associated with Dylan Thomas and the neo-romantic group of poets. Graham's poetry was mostly overlooked in his lifetime; however, partly thanks to the support of Harold Pinter, his work was eventually acknowledged. He was represented in the second edition of the Penguin Book of Contemporary Verse and the Anthology of Twentieth-Century British and Irish Poetry.
Alfred Charles Tomlinson, CBE was an English poet, translator, academic, and illustrator. He was born in Penkhull, and grew up in Basford, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire.
Charles Hubert Sisson, CH, usually cited as C. H. Sisson, was a British writer, best known as a poet and translator.
Andrew Waterman (1940–2022) was an English poet.
Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature.
Musa Moris Farhi MBE was a Turkish author who was vice-president of International PEN from 2001 to his death in 2019.
Muhammad al-Maghout was a renowned Syrian writer and poet.
Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature.
Mimi Khalvati is an Iranian-born British poet.
Munojot Yoʻlchiyeva, also known under the Russian form of her name, Munadjat Yulchieva, is the leading performer of classical Uzbek music and its Persian-language cousin Shashmaqâm. She is famous for the unique quality of her voice and her natural charisma. She is recognized as People's artist of Uzbekistan (1994). She is honored as the Heroine of Uzbekistan (2021).
Greg Delanty is an Irish poet. An issue of the British magazine, Agenda, was dedicated to him.
Gabriel Levin is a poet, translator, and essayist.
Eric Linn Ormsby is deputy head of academic research and publications at the Institute of Ismaili Studies in London. He was formerly a professor at McGill University Institute of Islamic Studies, where he also served as director. He has published widely on Islamic thought, including Theodicy in Islamic Thought (1984).
Stanley Moss is an American poet, publisher, and art dealer.
Alex Boyd is a Canadian poet, essayist, editor, and critic.
Anne Cochran Wilkinson was a Canadian poet and writer. She was part of the modernist movement in Canadian poetry in the 1940s and 1950s, one of only a few prominent women poets of the time, along with Dorothy Livesay and P. K. Page.
George McWhirter is an Irish-Canadian writer, translator, editor, teacher and Vancouver's first Poet Laureate.
John Rety, born Janos Réty was a Hungarian-British anarchist, poet, publisher and chessplayer.
Elizabeth Bachinsky is a Canadian poet. She has published four collections since 2005: Curio, Home of Sudden Service, God of Missed Connections, and The Hottest Summer in Recorded History. Her second book, Home of Sudden Service, was nominated for a 2006 Governor General's Award for Poetry. Bachinsky's work has appeared in literary journals and anthologies in Canada, the U.S., France, Ireland, the U.K., China and Lebanon.
Daniel Weissbort was a poet, translator, multilingual academic and founder and editor of the literary magazine Modern Poetry in Translation. He died at the age of 78, and was buried in the Brompton Cemetery in west London.