The Reader 64

Winter's chill may not have the same bite as we might have expected but there's plenty to chew on in the latest issue of The Reader.
In this quarter's edition you can enjoy new poetry from Kenneth Steven, John Greening, Michael O'Neill, Heidi Williamson and Ian Tromp who also reflects on Gift of his fear in the Poet on his Work. The old poem this month is a wintry read from English composer Thomas Campion, most recently a Featured Poem, while the historic fiction under the spotlight in this edition is The Uncommerical Traveller by Charles Dickens.
There's an interview with Moira Sinclair, Chief Executive of the Paul Hamlyn Foundation, one of the largest independent grant-making foundations in the UK, and essays from Josie Billington of University of Liverpool's Centre for Research into Reading, Literature and Society, Elizabeth Bonapace who discusses Autism, Shakespeare and Soliloquies, and the author Carys Bray who reflects on her novel A Song for Issy Bradley which our Director Jane Davis read for the first time earlier this year.
There are reading recommendations from our regular writers Brian Nellist and Angela Macmillan, and from our Patron Frank Cottrell Boyce who writes on Terry Pratchet's Truckers.
If you’re a Reader Magazine subscriber you'll receive your Issue 64 in time for Christmas. Otherwise you can purchase this Issue or back issues on our website.
Issue 64 costs £6.95
1 Year Subscriptions start at £24.00
Share
Related Articles

Pat: ‘You don’t need to be an academic – it’s about going on your gut feeling about a story or poem’
National charity The Reader runs two popular weekly 90-minute Shared Reading group at one of the UK’s most innovative libraries,…

Sue: ‘I like the fact you’re not judged by anyone, we have a laugh and learn a lot from each other’
National wellbeing charity The Reader is celebrating the first year of a second weekly Shared Reading group at one of the…

April’s Monthly Stories and Poems
Our year of Wonder with The Reader Bookshelf 2024-25 is coming to a close – though we won’t be putting…