Poetry at Pembroke: Kieron Winn
PAST EVENT | 05 February 2018 18:00 - 05 February 2018 19:00
'Poetry at Pembroke', a series of poetry readings taking place throughout Hilary term.
The series has been organised by Peter King, Lecturer in Philosophy at Pembroke. Performances take place every Monday evening at 6pm between 15th January - 5th March. Check our events page for further listings. To find out more please contact Peter King.
Kieron Winn’s first collection of poetry, The Mortal Man, was published in 2015 by Howtown Press: ‘superb collection’ (Agenda); ‘the unmistakable ring of the real thing’ (Bernard O’Donoghue). He was educated at Christ Church, Oxford, where he was awarded a doctorate for a thesis on Herbert Read and T.S. Eliot. His poems have appeared in magazines including Agenda, Agni, The Dark Horse, Literary Imagination, The London Magazine, The New Criterion, New Statesman, Oxford Magazine, Poetry Review, The Rialto, The Spectator, and The Times Literary Supplement. Selections of his poems have featured in anthologies including Carcanet’s Oxford Poets 2007 and Waywiser’s Joining Music with Reason, and he has read his poems on BBC TV and radio. He has twice won, in 2007 and 2013, the University of Oxford’s most valuable literary award, the English Poem on a Sacred Subject Prize. He lives in Oxford, where he is a freelance teacher.
Poetry at Pembroke: Kieron Winn
PAST EVENT | 05 February 2018 18:00 - 05 February 2018 19:00
'Poetry at Pembroke', a series of poetry readings taking place throughout Hilary term.
The series has been organised by Peter King, Lecturer in Philosophy at Pembroke. Performances take place every Monday evening at 6pm between 15th January - 5th March. Check our events page for further listings. To find out more please contact Peter King.
Kieron Winn’s first collection of poetry, The Mortal Man, was published in 2015 by Howtown Press: ‘superb collection’ (Agenda); ‘the unmistakable ring of the real thing’ (Bernard O’Donoghue). He was educated at Christ Church, Oxford, where he was awarded a doctorate for a thesis on Herbert Read and T.S. Eliot. His poems have appeared in magazines including Agenda, Agni, The Dark Horse, Literary Imagination, The London Magazine, The New Criterion, New Statesman, Oxford Magazine, Poetry Review, The Rialto, The Spectator, and The Times Literary Supplement. Selections of his poems have featured in anthologies including Carcanet’s Oxford Poets 2007 and Waywiser’s Joining Music with Reason, and he has read his poems on BBC TV and radio. He has twice won, in 2007 and 2013, the University of Oxford’s most valuable literary award, the English Poem on a Sacred Subject Prize. He lives in Oxford, where he is a freelance teacher.