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Acumen 111 – January 2025
Coming soon. Order now for dispatch by mid January 2025.
Acumen 111 highlights powerful new writing by well-known and emerging poets from across the UK, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, the USA, and beyond. Contributors include David Ball, Sarah Feldman, Gareth Culshaw, Julia Deakin, Wendy French, Steve Denehan, Myra Schneider, Colin Pink, Rosie Jackson, Martyn Crucefix, Patrick Osada, Isabel Miles, Jodi Cadenhead, Dinah Livingstone, Liam Aungier, Paul Surman, Caroline Price, David Sergeant, Jan FitzGerald, Chris Rice, Judith Skillman, Mike Everley, Tytti Heikkinen, Michael W. Thomas, Maggie Brookes-Butt, Toby Buckley, Linda Stern Zisquit, and many others.
This issue features an interview with Fred Beake, who examines the influences shaping poetry, including Greek literature, The Gawain Poet, myths such as The Cyclops, many British, French and American poets, historical events, and landscapes, including North Yorkshire on his writing.
Essays include Paul Gittins’s incisive study of working horses in poetry and Robert Griffiths’s exploration of the challenges and opportunities of artificial intelligence. Poetry in Translation features works by Ishihara Yoshiro, Anna Akhmatova, Paul Verlaine, Arthur Rimbaud, Rudolf Leonhard and others. The Reviews section presents critical insights from Kathleen McPhilemy, Colin Pink, Susan Mackervoy, and Andrew Geary.
An annual subscription to the Acumen Journal covers 3 issues packed with great poetry, plus stimulating reviews and essays. It represents great value for money for either yourself or as a thoughtful gift for a poetry-lover.
Editorial
Welcome to Acumen. Do check out our pages and great poems.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT OF ACUMEN. And a special thank you to those of you who have renewed your subscriptions and have added a donation, so that we can keep the price lower. If you haven’t renewed your subscription for Acumen, please do so here.
Thank you to everyone submitting poems and prose. Acumen has been experiencing a wonderful increase in submissions lately, and we’re grateful for the interest in our magazine. Thanks for your patience while everything is carefully reviewed. Please remember we do not accept simultaneous submissions, but we consider postal and electronic submissions. We do, however, encourage contributors to carefully review our submission guidelines to ensure their work aligns with what we publish – poetry and prose on poetry-related topics, and not short stories. To prepare your submission and for more information please see here.
We’re excited to share the latest Acumen with you, though we must apologise for recent postage issues. Unfortunately, some issues of Acumen have disappeared in Royal Mail. If you’ve experienced any delays or problems, please do let us know. Despite this, we’re committed to ensuring that everyone can enjoy the exceptional work featured in the latest edition. PDF copies are available, plus a very small number of printed copies which we are sending to those whose copies have gone astray. Please contact the Acumen editor for more information.
Thank you for your continued interest in Acumen and the world of poetry. As Emily Dickinson said, ‘I dwell in possibility’ – and it is through your support that we continue to explore the endless possibilities of poetry.
I end with lines that have been attributed to Yeats, but more likely originated from English author and playwright, Eden Phillpotts: ‘The universe is full of magic things, patiently waiting for our senses to grow sharper.’ I hope that the coming months give you magical things that your senses can sharpen to find, especially through the troubled world that often surrounds us.
Guest Poems and Young Poets
Acumen’s aim is to be wide-ranging, publishing contemporary poets both known and unknown, relying on the strength of the poetry rather than the name behind it.
Selected poems from each issue are posted on the website as guest poems for the week. We add photographs and very short biographies – a thing we don’t do in the magazine, preferring at that stage to let the poems speak for themselves.
Susan Mackervoy
Susan Mackervoy is a translator, writer and visual artist based in Cambridgeshire. She makes artist’s books and ephemera as old highway press.
Stephen Claughton
Stephen Claughton grew up in Manchester, read English at Oxford and worked for many years as a civil servant in London. His poems have appeared widely in magazines, both in print and online, and he has published two pamphlets, The War with Hannibal (Poetry Salzburg, 2019) and The 3-D Clock (Dempsey & Windle, 2020). He chairs Ver Poets and reviews poetry for The High Window and London Grip. His website is: www.stephenclaughton.com.
Adonis Anderson
Writing under an alias: D.C., Adonis has one book out: Cloudless in Hell (The Writings of D.C.) and this is his first book in a potential (uniquely structured) series.
Kata Brown
Kata Brown is 24 years old and currently living out of a suitcase exploring Europe. She likes to paint and write about the things she sees.
We love to publish new and established writers, in our journal and/or on our website and we are proud to have discovered many new voices.
We welcome unpublished poems, translations of poems, articles and debate on poetry covering a wide variety of topics and with different writing styles.
Find out how to submit your poems.
Poetry and Prose
Books and publications
We have a range of quality poetry publications for sale which we hope you will enjoy reading including hardbacks, paperbacks, pamphlets and single issues of the journal.
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