Maggie Butt
Maggie Butt | |
---|---|
Maggie Butt | |
Born | United Kingdom |
Occupation | Poet and novelist |
Website | www |
Maggie Butt is a British poet and novelist.
Background
Maggie Butt is an ex-journalist and BBC TV producer turned poet and novelist. Her latest poetry collection, Degrees of Twilight, was published in July 2015 by The London Magazine.[1] She is a Royal Literary Fund advisory fellow[2] and Associate Professor at Middlesex University, where she has taught creative writing since 1990. Her poetry has been published in international magazines and anthologies and been turned into choreography and a mobile phone app. She has judged poetry competitions for Ver poets, Torriano, Barnet, Ware poets[3] and Segora.[4]
After completing an English degree, Maggie Butt became a newspaper reporter, moving to BBC TV as a documentary writer, producer and director. She later returned to poetry and fiction, completing a PhD in creative writing[5] from Cardiff University.
Maggie Butt's first poetry pamphlet, Quintana Roo, was published by Acumen Publications in 2003. Her first full collection of poetry, Lipstick, was published in March 2007 by Greenwich Exchange; a launch event was held at Keats House in Hampstead, North London. Her edited collection of essays, Story - The Heart of the Matter, was also published by Greenwich Exchange in October 2007. An e-book and MP3, "I Am The Sphinx", were published by Snakeskin online poetry journal in 2009. Her collection of short poems, "petite", was published by Hearing Eye in 2010, and turned into a dance piece "Ashes" by choreographer Lesley Main.
Ally Pally Prison Camp, published June 2011 by Oversteps Books, charts the use of Alexandra Palace in North London as a 'concentration camp' for civilian enemy aliens during the First World War. It tells the story of the internees through black and white photographs, the paintings of internee George Kenner, extracts from memoirs and letters, and Maggie Butt's own poems.[6] The poems and stories from Ally Pally Prison Camp have been recorded and brought alive for visitors to Alexandra Palace in a locative mobile phone app produced by Helen Bendon.
"Sancti Clandestini - Undercover Saints", published November 2012 by Ward-Wood Publications, is a fully illustrated poetry collection, which proposes some alternative, imaginary saints, including the Patron Saints of liars, looters, rank outsiders, compulsive hoarders, old dogs and infidel girls. These undercover Patron Saints were illustrated by the staff and students of Middlesex University's BA Hons Illustration course, from famous and established artists to emerging talents. 'If the proof of a poem is in the richness of response it provokes, the illustrations here are that response made visible - a testimony to the subtle layers in this tender but incisive poetry.' Philip Gross
Degrees of Twilight was published in July 2015. The passage of time is tangible in Maggie's fifth collection. These poems use history, memory, work and travel as lenses to examine the inevitable pains and sharp pleasures at the heart of our transient lives.
A novel, The Prisoner's Wife is due to be published in August 2020 by imprints of Penguin Random House, in the UK and USA, under the pen name Maggie Brookes.
Dr Maggie Butt was Chair of the National Association of Writers in Education (NAWE) from 2007-2012, and founding Principal Editor of the peer reviewed journal Writing in Practice.
Maggie Butt lives in North London and Whitstable. She is married with two grown-up daughters.
Books
- Quintana Roo, Acumen Publications 2003
- Lipstick, Greenwich Exchange 2007
- Story - The Heart of the Matter, Greenwich Exchange 2007
- Petite, Hearing Eye 2010
- Ally Pally Prison Camp, Oversteps Books 2011[6]
- Sancti Clandestini - Undercover Saints’’, Ward-Wood 2012
- Degrees of Twilight, The London Magazine, 2015
References
- "Degrees of Twilight by Maggie Butt". thelondonmagazine.org. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
- "Maggie Butt – Novelist, Poet". rlf.org.uk. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
- "Ware Poets Open Poetry Competition 2019". nationalpoetrylibrary.org.uk. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
- "Segora Poetry competition 2019 results". poetryproseandplays.com. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
- "Maggie Butt (née Brookes) (BA 1977, PhD 2002)". blogs.cardiff.ac.uk. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
- "Ally Pally Prison Camp". www.overstepsbooks.com. Retrieved 5 July 2011.