Book Now – Performance Poetry Masterclass with Susan Evans
Susan will guide you through techniques to improve your performance and captivate your audience. Don’t miss this opportunity to expand your poetic horizons and connect with fellow wordsmiths. Come ready to explore and inspire – we can’t wait to see what you’ll create!
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**STOP PRESS** 2024 Poetry Competition Now Open and Judge Announced
Submissions are now invited for our annual Poetry Competition and we are delighted to announce the judge for 2024 is the incredible Susan Evans. We hope to receive a wide variety of poems and poetry styles on the theme of Food for this year’s competition.
Upon being invited by Hay Writers’ Circle, to be this year’s poetry competition judge, and performance master-class facilitator, Susan said:
“I’m thrilled to work with such a lovely group from Hay-on-Wye — the world famous ‘town of books.’ And get to pore over poems on the delicious theme of ‘food’. Moreover, visit gorgeous Hay, to deliver a joyful, in-person performance poetry workshop, in 2024 — exciting!”


Susan Evans is a multi-award-winning, multi-disciplinary artist, poet, writer, author and educator from working-class East London, of Irish and anglo Indian parentage. She lives and writes in her spiritual home of Brighton, UK.
Susan has a BA in Theatre with Visual Arts Practice, a Post Graduate Certificate in Education; both from the University of Brighton, and an MA in Arts Therapy (Drama) from the University of Roehampton. She is also a classically trained chef; a culinary artist of distinction from Brighton MET.
Susan was employed full-time, for twenty-five years, within the fields of arts and well-being, largely within the charity sector, across London and the South-East, and was writer and editor on a variety of in-house publications. Susan won a number of awards for innovation in engaging ‘hard to reach’ individuals, groups and audiences, before venturing freelance in 2014; writing and touring from London to New York, as an acclaimed spoken word artist.
A stage and page poet, Susan is widely anthologised and published in various, magazines and journals; nationally and internationally. Her poetry themes include food and travel, see Barcelona: CLICK HERE


CLICK HERE for Susan Evans’ debut poetry collection, Shift Happens (2020)
*POETRY COMPETITION – FIRST PRIZE £100*
The Hay Writer’s Circle Poetry Competition 2024 is open to everyone.
The first prize of £100 with additional cash prizes for 2nd and 3rd placed poems.
The closing date for entries is Tuesday 9th April, 2024
Results will be announced mid May.
Original, unpublished poems of up to 40 lines maximum on the theme of FOOD.
At our discretion, the winning poems will be published on the Hay Writer’s website. Publication may prevent eligibility for future competitions. All rights remain with the author.
For full competition guide lines and entry form please download the file below :
… or head on over to our Competitions page and read it there too.
Remember, anyone can enter this poetry competition and we can’t wait to read your amazing poems on the theme of FOOD.
Good luck!

A Warm Welcome to our New Hay Writers!
Over the last few months we have accepted several new writers into our long established group. These new members are all creative in spirit and write in a variety of genres; fiction, non-fiction and poetry. Some strive with novels, others are trying to perfect dramatic screen plays or dynamic short stories, then there are others who are beginning their journey with poetry. We welcome them all to our ranks and add their individual voices to the Hay Writers’ Circle collective.
Portraits of some of HWC members below:












If you want to know more about any of our writers, check out our “About Our Authors” page. It’s updated regularly, so do circle back to it as more information is added all the time. This does mean our membership is currently full, but we do have a waiting list for anyone wishing to join.
Competition News!

Firstly, a huge thank you to everyone who entered our annual Fiction Competition – results are pending! The Francis Copping Prize for Fiction was judged by the wonderful Carolyn Lewis and we are so grateful, for not only her judging skills, but also the workshop she gave us in December. We will keep you posted as soon as the results are announced.
As to our 2024 Poetry Competition, please watch this space. We have secured a stella judge for this year’s competition, hailing all the way from Brighton. Our judge is a “thrilling performer” (Hastings Times), and has been long and shortlisted for national poetry performance awards numerous times.
Announcement pending …
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Tagged #hayonewye, authors, Carolyn Lewis, Creative writing, fiction, Fiction Competition Judge, Frances Copping Memorial Prize for Fiction, Hay Festival, Hay-on-Wye, literature Wales, Marches, non fiction, poetry, Poetry Competition, Poets, Writers, writing, Writing Groups.
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Kerry Hodges – Winner of the 2023 Richard Booth Prize for Non Fiction. Plus An Old HWC Friend Calls In.
We are delighted to showcase Kerry Hodges’ winning piece, as judged by Tom Bullough for the 2023 Richard Booth Prize for Non Fiction. This is the second time Kerry has won this prize – Many Congratulations Kerry!


Tom wrote, ““When”. This reads like a prose poem, exactly calibrated and with a beautiful, incantatory quality. Its structure – this sense of the pressures of life released, if only fleetingly, into the dawn – is equally effective and affecting.“
—————————————————————————————————————————-
“When” by Kerry Hodges
When you receive an email from a close friend to say her ex, but still close, partner has taken his life. A person loved by a child, a mother. How do the survivors survive? When they wake each morning to the realisation their dream has become a daily nightmare. When the child asks why, why, why and her mother cannot answer. Was our love not enough?
When another close friend you meet in an overcrowded, overpriced coffee shop tells you the dad of a third friend has died. You knew T, only slightly but he was one of those people you don’t forget in a hurry. Upright, elegant, quick-witted. You must call his daughter.
‘I didn’t know he’d been ill.’ you say as you queue for your coffee.
‘That’s the thing,’ she replies, ‘He wasn’t.’
Okay you think as you stand at the till, rummaging in your wallet for £2.69, so how did he die? An accident, that’s the most obvious. Or a heart attack.
Arriving at a table in the noisy café, you ponder further. Did he take his life? Seems unlikely at such an age – he must have been over ninety.
You sip in unison.
‘Okay, so if he wasn’t ill, how did he die?’
‘VSED.’
‘VSED?’
Yes, Voluntarily Stopping Eating and Drinking.’
‘What, he chose to starve to death?’
‘Pretty much.’
Silence as you attempt to digest this information.
‘Tell me more.’
‘He decided to die this way in January and told his family and friends. They had to get a doctor to visit to ensure T had capacity to make the decision. He absolutely did.’
‘But what about B and the rest of his family? How did they feel?’
‘I don’t really know. Except they respected his wishes and cared for him. It took eleven days for him to die.’
You’ve never heard of this way of dying and find it scary but also peaceful, surrounded by loved ones. A supported death.
When so many friends are hurting. When a dear friend battles cancer. They are being brave, in pain, suffering. When they can’t walk out of hospital because their feet are weighed down by lead.
When they live on the loo as poison pours from their core. When they smile their dignified, brilliant smile as you enter the room. When they slurp homemade spicy soup as though it’s growing back their cells and their strength is returning with each spoonful.
When your grown child is lost in a working world of reports, visits, abuse, the taking of children to safety. When they receive little care from overworked, understaffed managers. When they crack and fall and drag themselves to their feet once again to ensure the office is staffed.
And when your elderly mother is getting frailer by the day. When she knows, the weaker she becomes, the more others will do unto her, even though she doesn’t want to be done unto. Like when the man from the care agency arrived to shower her and she said no, I don’t want to be helped by a man and the agency had not phoned to see if she would mind a man helping her. They were not seeing her, the 87-year-old woman who had birthed five daughters, sung in Gilbert and Sullivan operas, worked hard in her care of others. They saw an old lady who would accept any help offered. Too frail to argue the toss. She was not being respected, seen. She was reduced by age.
And when you have your own health worries. Eyesight failing – will I still be driving following my visit to the optometrist on Thursday?
When you move away from the minuscule world you inhabit. Climate crisis, train strikes, NHS strikes, postal strikes, cost of living crisis, war in Ukraine, war in Syria, the plight of women in Afghanistan, Palestine, boats bobbing in rough seas, over-loaded with people seeking asylum – and being refused – a plane to take them to Rwanda, the ongoing grind of institutional racism and sexism, mental health, hospitals creaking, weighed down, falling down for lack of funding. You can’t go on – the list becomes bleaker by the second. Overwhelming, under attack. Turn off the radio.
When you are in danger of cracking, being engulfed by what you see, hear, feel of the world. The low level, daily anxiety of the big issues; issues you can do very little about, when you feel your own impotence. The growing anxiety as friends tell their stories. When you find tears welling too readily, fatigue keeping you awake at night.
Empathy can be destructive.
But when you make tea, take it to your seat by the window and stare, unblinking into the dawn. Watch as light creeps along the hill, shyly opening its eyes for you. The sparrows awake, greet each other and begin their day – delicately drinking from the aluminium saucepan – will they get Alzheimer’s? – arguing furiously at the nuts, my turn, MY TURN. The woodpecker father, hopping up and down the energy balls, pulling sunflower seeds and taking them to his youngster who sits in the ash tree, patiently waiting for its breakfast. And the buzzard, sitting silently higher in the camouflage of leaves, hoping this will prevent the newly fledged robin, picking grubs from the earth, from seeing him.
And when you sip and swallow and sip and swallow and that movement, that repetition gives you comfort. Something has remained the same. For the moment, you can rely on daybreak, you can rely on nature. For the moment.
Lynn Trowbridge – Ex HWC Chair Comes Calling

At ninety nine and three quarter years of age, one would think Lynn Trowbridge would be slowing down a little, but as many of us know, her drive for reading, writing and living life is in itself an inspiration.
Earlier this month we were fortunate to enjoy Lynn’s company at our Cusop Hall meeting. She was our Chairperson for well over a decade , keeping the group writing and moving forward under her guidance. Of course, a decade ago Hay & District Writers’ Circle was very different; much smaller in number, meeting at member’s homes, publishing yearly magazines which were sold locally and just dipping our tentative online toe in the waters of the world wide web.
For our most recent members it’s good to hear how we have developed and arrived at where we are today – a strong, forward thinking writing group striving to craft individual voices through quality writing.
Our immense gratitude to Lynn and all those who shaped the HWC in the past cannot be overstated and we thank them for all their incredible efforts. The Hay Writers’ Circle journey certainly continues – onwards and upwards!
Don’t forget to subscribe with your email address in the box below.
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Tagged Award Winning writing, Books, Creative writing, Hay-on-Wye, hayonwye, Kerry Hodges, literature, literature Wales, Lynn Trowbridge, non fiction, non fiction competition, prize winning non fiction, Richard Booth, Richard Booth Prize for Non Fiction, Tom Bullough, writing, Writing Group, Writing Groups.
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2023 Richard Booth Prize for Non Fiction – Winners Announced
We are delighted to announce the results of our annual non-fiction competition.
This popular competition again received a good number of entries from both inside and outside Hay Writers’ Circle and we very much welcome external interest in all our writing competitions.
Our memorial prize, named in tribute to Richard Booth, the self-proclaimed “King of Hay”, who among many literary interests, was a keen supporter of the Hay Writers’ Circle. He sadly passed away in 2019, still in love with books, writers and his beautiful kingdom of Hay-on-Wye.



Our judge this year was the wonderful Tom Bullough, who celebrated recent success with his publication “Sarn Helen“, which has been Longlisted for the prestigious Wainwright Prize 2023 – Writing on Conservation. Congratulations Tom!
Without further delay, here are the results :
The Richard Booth Prize for Non-Fiction Competition 2023
1st place – “When” by Kerry Hodges
2nd place – “Pittosporum” by Ange Grunsell
3rd place – “A Memoir in Triplicate” by Mark Bayliss
A full judge’s report to follow.
Congratulations once again to everyone who entered their work and a huge thank you to our judge, Tom Bullough.

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Tagged Ange Grunsell, Creative writing, Hay Festival, Hay Writers., Hay-on-Wye, Kerry Hodges, literature, literature Wales, Mark Bayliss, Prize Winners, prize winning author, prize winning non fiction, Richard Booth, Richard Booth King of Hay, Richard Booth Prize, Richard Booth Prize for Non Fiction, Tom Bullough, writing, Writing Groups.
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Swansong of a Hay Legend – Lynn Trowbridge – St Mary’s Church 7/9/2023 – Her Final Public Performance.


It’s not without some mark of deep personal respect that I write this. For many years, Lynn Trowbridge, member of the Hay Writers’ Circle and it’s Chairperson for well over a decade encouraged, developed, published and supported countless emerging Hay writers.
She telephoned us each fortnight to remind us to turn up and “darling, have you written something new?”
Lynn always had something new, she always spurred us on and in may ways she still does!!!
Continuing to lead by example, she often took centre stage, quite literally at numerous Hay Festival performances, giving audiences fine, memorable readings. She retired from the HWC a few years ago to spend time publishing her two brilliant books, but still remains a highly valued friend of our group.



Now, at almost 100 years old (she will, I am sure, forgive me for revealing her age!) has decided it’s time for one last public performance. The fortunate event is the next Hay Forums presentation at St Mary’s Church, Thursday 7th September at 6.30pm. I encourage everyone to go along and enjoy Lynn’s remarkable wit and wisdom.
Details are as follows :
Hay Forums presents an informal talk and conversation with local author, Lynn Trowbridge: ‘A Life is What You Get’
Please join us for Hay Forums’ second event in the series of conversations, comments, dialogue and local music.
A Life is What You Get is the title of the autobiography written by one of Hay’s eldest and most respected residents, Lynn Trowbridge. Lynn will talk briefly about her book, and share some highlights and humour of a fascinating and at times harrowing life.
She will join Fr Richard in a Q and A session. The audience will be invited to join in this conversation.
To complement the evening there will be some wartime music favourites, lead by Terry Watson and Fr Richard and, at Lynn’s request, soprano Catherine Hughes will sing two beautiful sacred hymns.
Tickets on the door: £5.00. Refreshments will be available after the event.
Venue – St Marys’ Church, St Mary’s Rd, Hay-on-Wye, Hereford HR3 5EB
For more information CLICK HERE or email: info@stmaryschurchhayonwye.co.uk

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Tagged A Life Is What You Get, Author Performance, Author Talk, Books, Creative writing, Father Richard, Father Richard Williams, Hay Festival, Hay Forums, Hay Writers Circle, Hay-on-Wye, Hay-on-Wye Church, hayonwye, literature, live performance, Lynn Trowbridge, soprano Catherine Hughes, St Mary's Church, swansong, writing, Writing Groups., Writing Life
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Judges make Wainwright Prize and Wales Book of the Year 2023
The Richard Booth Non-Fiction Competition is now closed for entries. Thank you to everyone who submitted their writing, we greatly appreciate all your efforts and look forward to hearing the results in September.
In the mean time we must heartily congratulate our Non-Fiction Judge, Tom Bullough, for a fantastic achievement with his publication “Sarn Helen“, being Longlisted for the prestigious Wainwright Prize 2023 – Writing on Conservation.


A review by Mike Parker writes, “All time is now: in walking the length of Sarn Helen, Wales’ great north-south Roman highway, Tom Bullough meets centurions, saints and climate scientists alike, and has them all help him weave an urgent and powerful narrative of past, present and future. Though often deeply sobering, it is also a joyous voyage of discovery, of Wales itself, of Tom’s place within it, and the nuggets buried deep in its bedrock that might just help point us towards some hope”.
It’s a truly stunning read, “an immersive and evocative non-fictional journey through Wales and a revelatory meditation on the nation’s past, present and future“. Wainwright Prize 2023.
Well Done Tom!
The English Language Poetry Wales Book of the Year 2023
In other news, we must also congratulate a previous Judge of our Poetry Competition. A resounding applause to Paul Henry for winning the English Language Poetry Category at Wales Book of the Year 2023 with his 11th collection, “As If To Sing“.

“The power of song, to sustain the human spirit, resonates through “As if to Sing”. A trapped caver crawls back through songs to the sea; Welsh soldiers pack their hearts into a song on the eve of battle, ‘for safe-keeping’; a child crossing a bridge sings ‘a song with no beginning or end’…
Blurring past and present, a ‘torchsong’ of music and light intensifies in ‘The Boys in the Branches’, a moving sequence to the poet’s sons where three boys scale a tree to manhood, to ‘carve their names on the late sun’. The collection’s closing cadence includes the long poem ‘The Key to Penllain’. Set in the summer of 1969, its apocalyptic dream stages a search for a key which could save the planet. Rich in the musical lyricism admired by readers and fellow poets, As if to Sing is an essential addition to this poet’s compelling body of work.” Seren Books
Many Congratulations Paul!
We always feel so fortunate to have such wonderful writers judging our competitions. Thank you.
Summer Break!
Hay Writers’ Circle now breaks for the month of August and returns in September, pens-poised and imaginations ready. We wish all our followers and wonderful holiday and look forward to a creative Autumn to come.
Happy Writing from HWC! 🙂

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Tagged As If To Sing, Conservation Writing, Creative writing, Granta, Hay Festival, Hay Writers., Hay-on-Wye, literature, literature Wales, Nature Writing, Paul Henry, poetry, Poetry Collection, prize winning author, Sarn Helen, Seren Books, Tom Bullough, Wales Book Of The Year, Wales Writing, writing, Writing Groups.
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Announcement – Richard Booth Prize For Non-Fiction 2023 – Judge Confirmed & Competition Open!
*STOP PRESS*
Submissions are now invited for our annual Non-Fiction Competition, The Richard Booth Prize 2023, named after one of Hay-on-Wye’s most notable residents and it’s self proclaimed ‘King of Hay’. Richard was always a great supporter of books, Hay-on-Wye and of course, local writers.
Sadly, Richard passed away in 2019, but his name lives on everywhere in Hay, including this writing prize which he so graciously sponsored during his lifetime and we honour in his memory.


This year we are excited to confirm that the judge for our Non-Fiction Competition is Tom Bullough.
Tom Bullough grew up on a hill farm in Radnorshire. A novelist turned nonfiction writer, his latest, bestselling book, Sarn Helen, “is a joy” (Simon Jenkins, TLS) – at once a survey of early Welsh history and a call for immediate action on the climate and ecological emergency.
Tom’s previous publication was the acclaimed novel, Addlands. Horatio Clare wrote, “This is the book we have been waiting for from Tom Bullough, a complete work of art, astonishingly beautiful, deeply moving and gripping from first to last… the story of how the land made us all, and how the last century has changed us. Zola would have saluted it, and pressed copies on his friends”.
He is also author of 3 more novels, “Konstantin“, “The Claude Glass” and “A“.
Among his many other jobs, Tom has contributed to several titles in the Rough Guides series, and has held fellowships at Swansea University and USW, where he earned a PhD in Creative Writing. He lives near Brecon with his children and a dog.


*NON-FICTION COMPETITION – FIRST PRIZE £100*
First prize of £100 with additional cash prizes for 2nd and 3rd placed pieces.
Without further delay, here are the Non Fiction Competition details :
This is an open competition meaning – ANYONE CAN ENTER
The closing date for entries is midnight Tuesday 11th July 2023. Any entries received after this date will not be considered. The results will be announced mid September.
Criteria
• Entries must be entirely the work of the entrant and by submitting you are confirming that the work is your own. Any evidence to the contrary will result in immediate disqualification.
• Entries must not have been published, self-published, published on any website, blog, social media, or online forum, broadcast nor winning or placed (as in 2nd, 3rd, runner up etc.) in any other competition.
• If your entry has been long-listed or shortlisted in other competitions and provided it has not won a prize or been published, it is eligible.
• Simultaneous submissions are allowed but will become ineligible should they win a prize elsewhere or be published prior to the date of prize giving. Entry fees will not be refunded. You must inform us immediately should your entry be published or win a prize elsewhere.
• Entries submitted posthumously are not eligible.
• Entries must be a minimum of 500 words and a maximum of 1250 words. The theme is entirely open. Title is not included in the line count.
• We will disqualify entries if they are named or over the line limit. If you forget to add the title or line count your entry will NOT be disqualified.
Entries
• Please use a good-sized text (12pt preferred), and clear typeface (e.g., Times New Roman, Arial, Courier, or Comic Sans) as a courtesy to our judge, with single spacing between lines and double spacing between paragraphs.
• All entries are judged anonymously. Your name or any contact details must NOT appear on your entry. Please put your name, title, and contact details on the booking form only. Please do not include your name in the file name.
The results are final and correspondence will not be entered into over the results. All entrants will be informed of the results.
At our discretion, the winning entry will be published on the Hay Writers Circle website. Publication may prevent eligibility for future competitions. All rights remain with the author.
The entry form and full competition details can be downloaded here –
Time get get writing! Good luck!

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Tagged addlands, Creative writing, Hay Writers., Hay-on-Wye, hayonwye, literature, literature Wales, non fiction competition, non-fiction, prize winning non fiction, Richard Booth, Richard Booth King of Hay, Richard Booth Prize, Sarn Helen, Tom Bullough, Welsh Writing, writing, Writing Groups., writing prizes
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