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Naomi Foyle (born 22 February 1967) is a British-Canadian poet, novelist, essayist, editor, translator and activist. Best known for her five science fiction novels (Seoul Survivors, Astra, Rook Song, The Blood of the Hoopoe and Stained Light),[1] and her three poetry collections (The Night Pavilion, The World Cup and Adamantine),[2] she is also the author of several poetry pamphlets, two verse dramas and various short stories and essays. A non-Muslim Fellow of the Muslim Institute, Foyle is a contributing editor to Critical Muslim.[3] For her poetry and essays about Ukraine, she was awarded the 2014 Hryhorii Skovoroda Prize.[4]

Naomi Foyle
Native name
Naomi Foyle
Born (1967-02-22) February 22, 1967 (age 55)
London, United Kingdom
Occupationpoet, novelist, essayist, editor, translator, activist
NationalityBritish
GenreBritish literature
Website
www.naomifoyle.com

Life and career


Foyle was born in London, UK7. She was brought up in London, Hong Kong, Liverpool and Saskatchewan, and graduated from the University of Toronto with a BA in Philosophy in 1990.[citation needed]

In Toronto, Foyle wrote the lyrics to a song cycle based on the story of the Pied Piper of Hamelin. Set to music, the project grew to become Hush: An Opera in Two Bestial Acts, for which Foyle wrote the libretto. Featuring jazz singers Taborah Johnson and Holly Cole, Hush was produced at Theatre Passe Muraille in the autumn of 1990,[5] and won three Dora Mavor Moore Awards, including Best Musical. The same year Foyle wrote the liner notes for Holly Cole's first album, Girl Talk.[citation needed]

In 1991 Foyle returned to the United Kingdom, settling in Brighton, East Sussex, where she worked at radical book shop the Public House Book Shop and published poetry in magazines. Following the death of her mother, British-Canadian writer Brenda Macdonald Riches,[6] she lived in Vancouver from 1994 to 1996, working as the Office Manager and Librarian at the Kootenay School of Writing, and publishing the so-called "L*A*N*G*U*A*G*E poetry" pamphlet Febrifugue (treeplantsink press, 1996). From 1996 to 1997 she travelled in Central America, lived briefly in Saskatchewan and Brighton in 1996–7, recorded songs with various Canadian musicians, and self-published other poetry pamphlets. Between 1997 and 1999 Foyle taught English as a foreign language in Seoul, South Korea, the setting for her first novel, Seoul Survivors. In 1999 her short story "Star Pitch" appeared in the Serpent's Tail anthology Suspect Device, edited by Stewart Home.[citation needed]

Foyle returned to Brighton in 2000, where she read Tarot Cards for a living and continued to publish poetry pamphlets, including Red Hot & Bothered (Lansdowne Press, 2003), edited by poet and folk artist Graham Ackroyd and Canada (Echo Room Press, 2004), edited by Brendan Cleary. A visitor to Belfast since the mid-nineties, following the death of poet and journalist Mairtín Crawford in 2004, she edited and introduced the posthumous Mairtín Crawford: Selected Poems (Lagan Press, 2005).[citation needed]

In 2008 Foyle began a relationship with Waterloo Press (Hove),[7] who published her first two poetry collections (The Night Pavilion (2008) and The World Cup (2010)), and two subsequent pamphlets (Grace of the Gamblers: A Chantilly Chantey, illustrated by Peter Griffiths, and No Enemy but Time (2017). Foyle began working as an editor. She has edited twenty collections of poetry including The Privilege of Rain by David Swann (Waterloo Press, 2010), shortlisted for the 2011 Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry, Tantie Diablesse by Fawzia Muradali Kane, shortlisted for the OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature and Blue Wallpaper by Robert Hamberger, shortlisted for the 2020 Polari Prize. With Akila Richards, she is the co-project manager of LIT UP, an Arts Council England-funded mentoring and publishing programme for emerging poets of colour.[8]

During her doctoral studies (2006-2011), Foyle became involved in the struggle for a just peace in Israel-Palestine. With poet Judith Kazantzis and novelist Irving Weinman, she co-founded British Writers in Support of Palestine (BWISP),[9] an organisation that, prior to being subsumed by Artists for Palestine UK (APUK) campaigned for the cultural and academic boycott of Israel. In 2011, The Strange Wife, her one act verse drama set in Jerusalem, was produced at the Bush Theatre as part of the Sixty-Six Books project. In 2017 she edited the bilingual anthology A Blade of Grass: New Palestinian Poetry (Smokestack Books).[10]

From 2013 to 2018 Foyle published five science fiction novels with Jo Fletcher Books (Quercus UK/USA):[11] the standalone cyberchiller Seoul Survivors, named by the Guardian as "among the best in recent SF",[12] and the eco-science fantasy quartet The Gaia Chronicles, comprising Astra, Rook Song, The Blood of the Hoopoe and Stained Light. On the basis of Astra, Library Journal recommended the series "for Hunger Games fans of all ages".[13] During this period Foyle appeared at science fiction conventions in the UK and Canada and published guest blogs,[14][15][16] and an essay in Critical Muslim on the process of writing diverse eco-feminist science fiction.[17]

In 2016, Foyle was diagnosed with breast cancer. Her essay "Cancer: Key to Utopia" appeared in Critical Muslim in 2017.[18] Poems about her diagnosis, treatment and recovery are included in her third poetry collection, Adamantine, which was published by Red Hen/Pighog Press (Pasadena) and launched in America, Canada and the UK in 2019.[19]

Foyle has participated in international literary festivals and events, and holds a PhD in Creative Writing from Bangor University (2011) and is a Senior Lecturer in Creative Writing at the University of Chichester. Her editorial positions also include Creative Writing Editor of Gramarye, the journal of the Chichester Centre for Fairy Tales, Fantasy and Speculative Fiction.[20]


Selected publications



Prose



Poetry collections



Poetry pamphlets



Edited anthologies & collections (with introductions)



Co-translations



References


  1. Foyle, Naomi
  2. Naomi Foyle
  3. Naomi Foyle co-founded British Writers In Support of Palestine upon her return from the Gaza Freedom March in Cairo
  4. Naomi Foyle’s Poetry Wins Award!
  5. WorldCat
  6. Brenda Riches Profile (Early 1980s)
  7. WATERLOO PRESS
  8. LIT UP
  9. British Writers In Support of Palestine
  10. A Blade of Grass: New Palestinian Poetry
  11. NAOMI FOYLE
  12. Mayhem by Sarah Pinborough, Red Moon by Benjamin Percy, Angelfall by Susan Ee, Seoul Survivors by Naomi Foyle and Carpathia by Matt Forbeck
  13. Naomi Foyle. Astra
  14. WRITING WITH GREEN INK AND PEANUT BUTTER: SF AND ASTRA
  15. GUEST POST: FATHERS & THE MOTHERSHIP BY NAOMI FOYLE
  16. GUEST BLOG Author Naomi Foyle
  17. Naomi Foyle. Seeking Ilm on the Silk Road
  18. Naomi Foyle. Cancer: Key to Utopia
  19. Reviews in tandem with the Anglo/French issue of Agenda vol 53 Nos 1-3
  20. The Chichester Centre for Fairy Tales, Fantasy and Speculative Fiction


  1. Ihor Pavlyuk. A Flight Over the Black Sea (2014)



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