Saboteur Awards 2019 Category Spotlight: Best Poetry Pamphlet
One of the most popular categories in the Saboteur Awards is the race for Best Poetry Pamphlet. Following the first round of public votes, from all the releases in the last twelve months you managed to narrow the search down to a final four favourites. You can cast your vote between them by heading over to the voting form here.
How to Wear Grunge by Ruth Stacey (Knives Forks and Spoons)
Ruth Stacey is a poet who lectures part-time at the University of Worcester. Her second full-length collection, I, Ursula, is forthcoming with V.Press. Her PhD research is focused on historical voice and the blurring of memoir and biography. Stacey is currently researching the life of the artist Pamela Colman Smith.
How to Wear Grunge is a blurring of grunge girl biography and personal memoir. Voices interrogate unreliable narrators and the storytelling fiction of memory. This is a collection that takes an unflinching look at drug abuse, death and trauma; asking what leads to this wearing of a grunge lifestyle? Eventually though, it is hope, ‘as precious as a robin’s egg tucked inside an old kettle,’ that lives through it all.
How to Wear Grunge is available to purchase through Knives Forks and Spoons website, and you can keep up to date with Ruth by heading over to her personal website just here.
Bella by Nellie Cole (Offa’s Press)
Polygon New Poets by Iona Lee (Polygon)
Iona Lee is a poet, performer and illustrator from East Lothian, Scotland. Now a graduate of the Glasgow School of Art, Iona fell in to the Scottish spoken word scene at the tender age of seventeen, guided by the watchful eye of her friend, mentor and drinking buddy Salena Godden. Iona went on to win the title of Scottish slam champion in 2016, and her debut pamphlet was published with Polygon last year. Iona has appeared on BBC Scotland, BBC Radio Scotland, The Verb, and has performed all around the UK and Europe. She has performed at Glastonbury, the Edinburgh International Book Festival, and StAnza to name a few, and has been published in the Scotsman, Gutter Magazine, the Morning Star and the Skinny. She also fronts an experimental beat poetry band called Acolyte. Her work revolves around themes of contemporary womanhood, folklore and existential fears.
You can get a taste for Iona’s performance style by checking out her one of her appearances from earlier this year, just here, and Polygon New Poets is available to purchase here.