St. Botolph's Review
St Botolph's Review was the student-made poetry journal from Cambridge University, England in 1956, which saw the first publication of Ted Hughes' poetry, at the launch of which Hughes met Sylvia Plath.[1] The first issue appeared on 26 February 1956.[1]
It was named for St Botolph's Church, Cambridge as one of its founders, Lucas Myers, lived at the rectory of that church.
A second edition was published in 2006.[1] A copy of the original journal was stored in the British Library in 2010.[2]
Contributors
Led by Hughes, the other contributors were listed as: David Ross, Daniel Huws, Daniel Weissbort, Lucas Myers, Nathaniel Minton and George Weissbort.[3]
gollark: As vengeance.
gollark: Okay, in that case you must buy all of my favourite games.
gollark: <@319753218592866315> Why are you insistisisisisngining I buyinate Terrarararai?
gollark: Buy two exapunks.
gollark: Sounds like a dubious interwebsite.
References
- "St Botolph's Review, Ann Skea". David Andrews Ross. 2006. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
- "Ted Hughes journal and the British library". BBC. 2010. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- "St Botolph's Review, title and contents page". David Andrews Ross. 27 July 1956. Retrieved 18 Oct 2015.
External links
- Full Overview
- 'British Library Archive throws light on Hughes and Plath', guardian.co.uk
- Stored back-up version
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