
Celebrating Elmet as a Creative Source: A Ted Hughes Birthday Poetry Reading
The Dusty Miller, Mytholmroyd
Sunday 17th August at 7:30
To mark Ted Hughes’ birthday, join us to hear four dynamic poets in his native Mytholmroyd. Located in the North of England, their work responds to landscapes that echo the Calder Valley and Hughes’ framing of it as Elmet.
A free event in our ‘Poetry and Community’ programme. Donations will contribute to the Elmet Trust
Tom Branfoot is Poet in Residence at Manchester Cathedral and has recently been nominated for the Forward Prize for Best Single Poem – Written. He won a Northern Debut Award for Poetry in 2024, the New Poets Prize 2022 and organises the More Song poetry reading series in Bradford. Tom is the author of This Is Not an Epiphany (Smith|Doorstop) and boar (Broken Sleep Books) and his debut collection Volatile is forthcoming next year with the 87press.
Becca Drake is a poet, educator, and printer based in York. They have a PhD in English and Icelandic late-medieval poetry, and her/their academic research explores lived landscapes of the medieval sea, the blue humanities, and medieval poetry as a tool for exploring affective relationships with landscapes of contemporary water crisis. Becca edits and prints experimental letterpress poetry pamphlets under the name Little Hirundine and their collection Unstill Landscapes was recently published by Guillemot.
Antony Rowland is Professor of Modern and Contemporary Poetry at Manchester Metropolitan University. He has published four poetry collections: The Land of Green Ginger (Salt, 2008), I Am a Magenta Stick (Salt, 2012), M (Arc, 2017) and Caldebroc (Arc, 2023). He was awarded the Manchester Poetry Prize in 2012 and received an Eric Gregory Award in 2000.
David Mullin is a much-valued Elmet Trust volunteer, an archaeologist and writer. He recently completed a residency focussed on the poetry of archaeologist Jacquetta Hawkes at the University of Bradford, and has work published in Apocalyptic Landscape: Poems from the Expressionist Poetry Workshop, Elsewhere: A Journal of Place, Where Meadows, The Prose Poem and Channel Magazine.
