Read

    Bits of a Poet

    Bits of a Poet “Understanding comes in different forms, and poems are not riddles.” – Bohdan Piasecki We build poems out of bits of language. Words, and groups of words, and ways in which words interact. We each amass a different set of these bits, and even the ones we ostensibly share we imbue with…

    Read More
    Edalia looks to the side and up, wearing her hair down, with hoop earrings.

    The Animated Poet

    A few years ago I realised if I draw while I listen, it tames my frantic mind and lets the poets’ words reach me. I have AHDH and I love poetry and drawing. My mind bounces all over the place when I create which is a joy for stringing together wild ideas, but my mind…

    Read More
    Close up of table with gingerbread people biscuits, pine cones, fairy lights

    Goodbye 2022

    Hello from Apples and Snakes, and goodbye 2022! A momentous year for us as we turned 40 on 2nd October 2022.  Wahoooo!!! It’s amazing! What was started by a small collective of poets Mandy Williams, Pete Murry and Jane Addison in a room at the Adam’s Arms, on Saturday 2nd October 1982 is still here, going strong, 40 years later…

    Read More
    A woman with long dark hair wearing a high necked, long sleeve white dress puts her arm behind her head, standing in front of a tall tower block

    I Don’t Owe You a Trauma Poem

    “i hate having to share trauma with white people to be taken seriously. as a writer but also just as a person. like, is that the only way whiteness recognises me as a person? through pain?” – Chen Chen The very first spoken word poem I ever wrote was on my experience of a lifetime…

    Read More
    A woman with dark rimmed glasses and loosely tied up hair, with an open smile

    Being A Disabled Poet

    I’d love it if people could read the word ‘disabled,’ notice what feelings come up and then challenge them. Try it now. Disabled poet. I think I did have a sense that the village hall tea-party, in the middle of Norfolk, on a sunny afternoon, might not be ‘my audience’ but then, I didn’t want…

    Read More
    A woman with red lips and dark hair looks straight on

    Commission This – Shagufta K Iqbal

    The world of commissioning can sometimes be a minefield, and it can be difficult to know where to start. I’ve been practising as a poet and workshop for over 10 years now, and alongside this work, I have also been commissioned to write for a variety of different projects. Each with its own trials, tribulations,…

    Read More
    Portrait of Ioney standing with sun on her face

    The Educational Poet

    Its September. School bells are calling in students to begin a new academic year, and for many writer teachers like me, we’re trying to find the balance and earning a living and honouring their creative endeavours. I’m a part-time English lecturer working in Further Education (FE), teaching GCSE English Language resits to learners who didn’t…

    Read More
    Black and white portrait of Shirley may looking ahead

    The Beginning of Young Identity

    Young Identity started life as Inna Voice. In 2006, we entered Apples and Snakes’ national poetry slam “Word Cup” at Warwickshire University. It was extremely exciting and we had no idea that we would end up with a project that has now become a micro charity. After Word Cup, we started running weekly workshops in…

    Read More
    Image of Tom - a man with curly hair and glasses looking to the side

    A Poet Walks Into a Bar

    ​​The first poem I ever performed in public was in the basement of a Starbucks. It was something sweet, innocent and poorly written about holding hands (we don’t all burst onto the scene masters of the Craft). As I compared notes with the other budding performers afterwards however, I slowly realised that my earnest poem…

    Read More
    A woman with long dark hair, centre parted, wearing black rimmed glasses, smiling.

    From Callout to Publication

    How it Worked For me – Sundra Lawrence I love Apples and Snakes callouts – the news neatly folded in my inbox, a truthful subject header – Callouts, courses and mentoring opportunities – and the unlatched thrill of hope. A few years ago, I’d decided to take my writing practice more seriously. This included reading…

    Read More
    Black and white picture of Iroro looking towards camera wearing sunglasses

    Iroro Azanuwha: Not a typical poet

    Some people might say that I don’t look like a typical poet. I’m ok with that.

    Read More
    A young man standing on stage, speaking into a mic, wearing a blue outdoors rain mac

    Not Feeling Like a Poet

    “I’ve never really seen myself as a writer, more somebody who happens to write. I didn’t grow up dreaming of being a poet. I always saw my body as a more likely avenue to success than my brain.” I was good at football and running; I captained my Sunday League team and ran for my…

    Read More
    A striking woman with dark eye brows and ring in her nose.

    Tahmina Ali – This is a Mother Poet

    “…The only thing that helped me stay connected to who I was was my writing” Who am I? I am a poet who writes about things that matter to me, so I like to write about culture and identity. I am a North East poet and a British Bangladeshi. I am a new mum and…

    Read More
    A cartoon bear looks up at a pink sky

    The Poems of Joseph Coelho

    Joseph Coelho has been a long-time friend of Apples and Snakes. With his latest release, Poems Aloud, what better way to celebrate it than on World Book Day. It’s full of beautiful illustrations and stand-up and read out loud poetry for children (or anyone really!). 3 March also marks the start of SPINE Festival, a…

    Read More
    a woman with short cropped hair and pear earring tilts her head towards the camera

    Practical Poetry in Times of Revolution – lisa luxx

    “I speak here of poetry as a revelatory distillation of experience, not the sterile word play that, too often, the white fathers distorted the word poetry to mean – in order to cover a desperate wish for imagination without insight.” – Audre Lorde, Poetry is Not a Luxury It was the winter of 2020 when…

    Read More
    A woman with short dark hair and blue eyes surrounded by leaves and flowers

    Kate Fox: This is a Neurodivergent Poet

    This is a Neurodivergent Poet… I know a lot of other poets feel, as I did, that whenever they first encountered the world of poetry, they had found their tribe. I had glimpsed my tribe before. I found them in the amateur drama groups I joined from being a teenager. They were in the green…

    Read More
    A cluster of smiling gingerbread people

    2021 Round Up

    Hello from Apples and Snakes What to say about 2021, was it worse than 2020? Hard to choose! We kept ourselves busy making work and supporting artists through programmes such as Writing Room, Work from Home, Artists Gatherings and our bespoke Poetry in Performance development programme supported by Jerwood Arts. We collaborated again with the…

    Read More
    A woman with curly hair laughs. She is joined by two women in headscarves looking towards her

    Open House: Mapping the journey of ESOL

    Open House has been running as part of the SPINE Festival since 2017. The project is specifically devised for refugee and migrant communities in London, allowing participants to creatively explore language through culture. This year (2021) was the last year Open House was part of SPINE festival and we thought it would be great to…

    Read More
    A woman with short hair, white shirt and blue jeans squats on a brick wall against a blue sky

    On Poetry and Painting – Alice Frecknall

    Subject, perspective, composition, medium, colour palette, framing, tools… these are some of the things that come to mind when I think about approaching the start of a painting. But if I said this was a list of considerations attached to creating a poem, I think it would still stand. For framing, read form; for colour…

    Read More
    Black and white image of Jean Binta Breeze laughing

    Jean “Binta” Breeze

    We are deeply saddened to learn of the passing of our great friend and most powerful poet, Jean Binta Breeze. Since 1986, Jean performed at nearly 90 Apples and Snakes events as well as mentored, encouraged and inspired generations of poets through our development programmes. A pioneer, a true inspiration and total poetry legend –…

    Read More
    SPINE Festival 2021

    What’s SPINE Festival all about?

    Preparations for this year’s SPINE Festival are well underway and we can’t wait for it to start in June. The festival is for children, young people and families and takes place across libraries situated at the heart of London’s communities, both digitally and in-person. This year the festival’s theme is ‘EMPATHY’ and launches on 1…

    Read More
    Photo of a woman with brown eyes and a nose piercing looking directly to the camera

    Zena Edwards: Comfortable With the Uncomfortable

    Zena recently joined Apples and Snakes officially as a Consulting Artistic Associate. She has been a long time friend of ours so it is great to embark on this journey together. We will share more of our work with Zena over the next few months. For now, here’s an introduction interview so you can get…

    Read More
    Portrait of two older black men, one with a cap that reads 'the last poets' and the other in a cotton cap. Both with beards, looking intent.

    The Last Poets: Abiodun Oyewole and Umar Bin Hassan – Part 2

    In the second part of this blog, Artistic Director of Apples and Snakes, Lisa Mead, and Consulting Artistic Associate, Zena Edwards, delve a little deeper with our friends Abiodun Oyewole and Umar Bin Hassan from The Last Poets. They discuss how poetry has shaped them, what they think it means to be a poet, and…

    Read More
    Portrait of two older black men, one with a cap that reads 'the last poets' and the other in a cotton cap. Both with beards, looking intent.

    The Last Poets: Abiodun Oyewole and Umar Bin Hassan – Part 1

    Artistic Director of Apples and Snakes, Lisa Mead, interviewed our friends Abiodun Oyewole and Umar Bin Hassan from The Last Poets to discuss poetry as their chosen form of expression, the longevity of their careers and how it all began. In the first part of this blog, Abiodun and Umar share what kept them going…

    Read More

End of content

End of content