
Angela Graham
Angela Graham is from Northern Ireland. She has had an award-winning career as a film maker in Wales, is a Fellow of the Institute of Welsh Affairs and a Welsh-speaker. Her collection of poetry, Sanctuary: There Must Be Somewhere 2022 and her collection of short stories, A City Burning 2020 (long-listed for the Edge Hill Prize) are published by Seren Books. She won the Poetry Prize in the inaugural Linen Hall Ulster-Scots Writing Competition, 2021. Her poetry collection Star: poems for the Christmas Season has just been published by Culture And Democracy Press.

A City Burning
Many of the characters in A City Burning face decisions about embracing a fuller life, though at a cost to themselves. Others are witness to events in which they must decide to be involved or pass by. These are stories, especially the ones set in The Troubles, where the reader is bound to a character's dilemmas by tellingly empathetic writing.

Sanctuary: There Must Be Somewhere
Sanctuary is – urgent. The pandemic has made people crave it; political crises are denying it to millions; the earth is no longer our haven. This theme has enormous traction at a time of existential fear − especially among the young − that nowhere is safe. Even our minds and our bodies are not refuges we can rely on. Truth itself is on shaky ground. Sanctuary: There Must Be Somewhere addresses these critical situations from the inside. How we can save the earth, ourselves and others? How valid is the concept of a ‘holy’ place these days? Are any values still sacrosanct? We all deserve peace and security but can these be achieved without exploitation? Belfast-born Angela Graham divides her time between Wales and Northern Ireland. Alongside her own work, she has designed this collection to embody the hosting, welcoming aspect of Sanctuary by inviting five other poets from Wales and Northern Ireland to contribute a poem each. In Wales, Phil Cope from the Garw Valley is an expert on the holy wells and shrines of the British Isles and Mahyar is an Iranian writer who has made a new home in Wales. In Northern Ireland, poet and novelist, Viviana Fiorentino is an economic migrant from Italy, working with migrants and prisoners of conscience, while film maker and poet, Csilla Toldy fled communist Hungary for a ‘free’ life in the West. The fifth poet, Glen Wilson (winner of the Seamus Heaney Award for New Writing), acted as mentor for Angela’s work and contributes a poem on migration.

STAR
STAR lights up Christmas. We journey through the collection as 'everyday Magi', encountering revelations, surprises and new insights. At the book's core are The Three Kings but also The Three Queens: women who are brought forward from behind the scenes, to be seen and heard. Mae Star yn cynnig goleuni'r Nadolig, trwy gasgliad o gerddi sy'n adlewyrchu profiadau dynol amrywiol, gan ganfod datguddiadau, rhyfeddodau a mewnwelediadau newydd. Yn ganolog i'r gyfrol mae'r Tri Brenin, ond yn ogystal y Tair Brenhines, sef gwragedd a dynnwyd i'r blaen o'r cysgodion, i'w gweld a'u clywed. Clywn hefyd ieithoedd amrywiol - Gwyddeleg, Cymraeg a Gaeleg, sy'n adlewyrchu ymrwymiad y bardd ag ieithoedd brodorol ynysoedd Prydain.
