Jo L. Walton
For other people named Jo Walton, see Joseph Walton (disambiguation).
Jo L. Walton (Joseph Churches Lindsay Walton) (born April 15, 1982) is a poet and fiction writer.
Background
Walton also publishes as Lorqi Blinks (with Samantha Walton), Harvey Joseph (with James Harvey), Helen Bridwell (with August Highland), Francis Crot, Jow Lindsay,[1] Jo W. Lindsay, Jo Lindsay, Jo Crot, Megan Zword, Sophie Stamina, Kyle Storm Beste-Chetwynde, Marianne Munk, Jeremy Beardmore, and Jamelia Wigmore.[2]
Walton has performed his work both in the UK and abroad, including the Cork International Poetry Festival SoundEye, the Edinburgh International Book Festival,[3] and Biennale International des Poètes en Val-de-Marne. He studies at Northumbria University, and lives between Edinburgh and Bath.
Selected works
- Francis Crot, The Cuntomatic (yt communication, 2007)
- Francis Crot and Nour Mobarak, The Seven Curses (Critical Documents, 2008)
- Francis Crot, Pressure in Cheshire (Veer Books, 2009)
- The Two Brothers, Finite Love (Critical Documents and Bad Press, 2010)
- Yolanda Tudor-Bloch, The Woman: A Song City Memoir (Department No. 2, 2010)
- Francis Crot, Hax (Punch Press, 2011)[4]
- Megan Sword and Timpani Skullface, Superior City Song (Critical Documents, 2012)
- Colleen Hind and Pocahontas Mildew, We Are Real (Critical Documents, 2012)
- Harvey Joseph and Lindsay James, Sea Adventures, or, Pond Life (RunAmok Press, 2012)
- Jo L. Walton / Jo Lindsay Walton, Invocation (Critical Documents, 2013)[5]
- Goat Far Dale Turbo and Papa Boop Ndiop, Animal Crater (Crater Press, 2013)
- Jo Lindsay Walton, Marta and the Demons (Preyed Press, 2014)
References
- ↑ Tuma, Keith (Spring 2007). "Some Younger British Poets (about Jow Lindsay)" (PDF). Chicago Review. 53 (1). Retrieved 10 February 2014.
- ↑ McCaffery, Steve (2012). Poetics, Anachronism, and the Anomaly. University Alabama Press. p. 79. ISBN 0817357335.
- ↑ Bolsover, Mark (August 15, 2013). "BOOK FESTIVAL – Miriam Gamble, Sam Riviere & Jo Walton". Edinburgh Spotlight. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
- "Edinburgh international book festival 2013: week one live blog". The Guardian. 17 August 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2014. - ↑ Buckerton, Lara (December 2010). "Chaoplexity: the Science and Science Fiction of Warfare". Vector (264). Retrieved 10 February 2014.
- ↑ Herd, Colin. "We Never Really Left the Museum". 3:AM. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
- Loftus, Peter (September–October 2013). "Invocation (review)". Interzone (248). Retrieved 10 February 2014.
External links
- Official website
- Sad Press
- Froggy Goes Piggy (at The Long+Short)
- Recordings at Meshworks
- Jo Walton's Election Message (from Openned)
- Talking Donkey Bloodbath by Francis Crot
- Poems by Kyle Storm Beste-Chetwynde (in Onedit)
- Poem by Karen Eliot (in Past Simple)
- Post-Marginal Positions: Women and the UK Experimental/Avant-Garde Poetry Community in Jacket
- Poets as Activists at Militant Poetics
- Interview as Jeremy Beardmore at The Other Room
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