Accabre Huntley

Accabre Huntley (born 1967) is a British poet of Guyanese parentage. She became a published poet as a child, and has performed nationally and internationally on radio and television.[1]

Life

Accabre Huntley was the daughter of the activists and publishers Jessica Huntley and Eric Huntley, who founded Bogle L'Ouverture Publications in 1969. At the age of seven she wrote a poem about suffering racist abuse which was published by Valerie Sinason, who was then doing therapeutic work with children in East London.[2] At the age of nine or ten she published a book of poems, At School Today, with Bogle L'Ouverture.[3][4] While studying at Reynolds High School in Acton, London, she published her second poetry collection, Easter Monday Blues.

Huntley's work has been anthologised in collections including James Berry's News from Babylon (1984) and children's anthologies like Grace Nichol's Black Poetry (1988).[1]

She leads poetry workshops in schools, and is a member of the Poetry Society's Poets in Schools scheme and the Poetry Society's Examinations Department Advisory Group.[1]

Works

  • At School Today. Ealing: Bogle-L'Ouverture, 1977.
  • Easter Monday Blues. Ealing: Bogle-L'Ouverture, 1983.
gollark: You just stand in the frame, type a destination into the teleporter, hope that the other end is chunkloaded, and get teleported to the other end, assuming it didn't randomly break and strand you forever.
gollark: I abused spatial IO, the multifrequency ender chests from that ender chest mod, and ComputerCraft to make teleporters.
gollark: Bee statistics continue to mildly improve.
gollark: (the drones in each apiary are genetically analyzed (with cheated honey right now, we plan to upscale) so it just has to check the metadata on them over the network)
gollark: μhahahaha.

References

  1. Kadija Sesay (2002). Alison Donnell (ed.). Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture. Routledge. p. 146. ISBN 978-1-134-70025-7.
  2. P. Hoggett (2000). Emotional Life and the Politics of Welfare. Springer. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-230-59781-5.
  3. Robert Leeson (1985). Reading and Righting: The Past, Present, and Future of Fiction for the Young. Collins. p. 236. ISBN 978-0-00-184413-1.
  4. Karen Sands-O'Connor (2017). Children’s Publishing and Black Britain, 1965-2015. Springer. pp. 73–4. ISBN 978-1-137-57904-1.
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