‘Safe Ground’ at number 4 in French Poetry (Books) on Amazon UK

Last weekend I was being blown over with my sons at the top of Arthur’s Seat in Edinburgh – many thanks to the kind stranger who caught me and helped me to my feet before I crashed sideways into a boulder! Today it’s Amazon’s French Poetry list that has me blown away – ‘Safe Ground’ is at number 4, between Billy Connolly and ‘The Count of Monte Cristo’.

How on earth is a wee book of poetry written in English on that list at all? My book ‘Safe Ground’ tells the story (in poetry) of my travels and escapes from Northern Ireland via Cambridge and London to the north coast of Kent. Where does France come in?

In February 2021 my home was full of builders making emergency repairs to the roof. In icy blasts, they clambered like mountain goats among the scaffolding. It felt at the time as if we might never get to socialise in public again, so escapism took hold. I wrote about a little trip I’d made alone to Paris the previous February and relived the pleasures of sitting in a Parisian restaurant. Those scribbles became ‘Laughing and Grief’ (as the Mock Turtle used to say), and were published later that year by American Writers Review in their 2021 Turmoil and Recovery anthology.

With thanks to lovely Henri who helped me climb through the graves in Montmartre cemetery to find Beckett and Seberg, ‘Laughing and Grief’ is about how laughs and sadness jostle together in our lives and how recovery can find us at the strangest times. You can buy here from Amazon or here from publisher Mica Press.

Thanks to No Alibis in Belfast who had this sign outside their excellent book shop years ago and I couldn’t resist a screenshot.

Safe Ground’s publication day

It’s Safe Ground‘s big day! You can find it on Mica Press’s website here and on Amazon. No reviews yet but the initial responses are huge smiles and enthusiasm.

If you’d like to buy one from me direct, signed specially for you, please don’t hesitate to contact me at rosiejohnstonwrites@gmail.com

This evening we’re celebrating in West Greenwich, London at an event run by my dear friend, Irena Hill of In-Words. As well as Safe Ground, Mica will launch Michael Vince’s Legwork and Antony Johae’s Foreign Forays and Mica poets Nayma Chanchoun, Michael Foley and Leslie Bell (Mr Mica himself) will read too. More details are here: please scroll down In-Words’ events column on the right. 

The cover photograph is me beside the Mourne Wall in County Down, taken by my father more years ago than I care to count. As I said in my dedication to Bittersweet Seventeens (Lapwing Publications, 2014), he gave me life in so many ways.

Safe Ground in Wivenhoe’s Old Grocery yesterday

Wivenhoe in Essex was all sunshine and spreading buds yesterday and people who could hardly believe that it really was early spring. Leslie Bell of Mica Press met AC Bevan and me off the London train and we walked along the riverside with almost forgotten warmth on our backs. We were heading for the Old Grocery, a beautiful little gallery in the town centre where AC and I would read from our new collections with Antony Johae, all of us Mica poets. The audience were wonderful – laughter and a few tears of course, excellent questions and lovely company. I’ll remember this event as one of the warmest I’ve experienced. Very many thanks to Les Bell, AC and Antony, and to Della and Jonathan of the gallery.

AC, Antony and Les, with me in white

Faversham Literary Festival 2025

For several years now, I’ve had the great fun of hosting poets at the Faversham Literary Festival and generally helping out. It’s in February, just when we need a lift after a long winter, and every year we say afterwards that it was the best yet. Somehow it always is. Congratulations to Amanda and Mark who run it with Will and the tech team and Megan, our marvellous woman with the clipboard. Here are a handful of photos of what we got up to:

Below is our outstanding showcase of local authors, with a picture below of me and my shepherd’s crook, in case anyone went on too long…

Maggie Harris, Mike Bartholomew-Biggs and me after our Hub reading in Faversham’s medieval Guildhall. Below are happy bar staff (with Mark) after a long day, Mark and Amanda with Linton Kwesi Johnson in St Mary’s, Faversham, and Christopher Horton wowing the Guildhall at the Hub

‘Safe Ground’ is nearly off the ground

We’re in the final proof checks of ‘Safe Ground’, well on course for publication by Mica Press on 25 March, 2025. This stage is indescribably exciting and I can’t wait to hold a copy in my hand.

Meanwhile there’s the Faversham Literary Festival to look forward to. I’m hosting the Poetry Hub this Saturday 22 February and notice that everything is sold out! I am scheduled to read in Faversham Guildhall at 5.30pm with Michael Bartholomew-Biggs (an excellent poet who has edited new poetry and poetry reviews at London Grip for many years) and Maggie Harris, a Guyanese poet and prose writer living in Thanet, who was awarded the Guyana Prize for Literature in 2000 and 2014 for her collections of poetry Limbolands and Sixty Years of Loving, respectively.

All three of us have new poems and old favourites to read to you.

Prompts from Churchill Writers last weekend

He wonder’d, / He stood in his / Shoes and he wonder’d.                                 

John Keats, ‘A Song about Myself’

The birds were silent in their nest, / And I must seek for mine

Wm Blake, ‘Night’

They are not long, the days of wine and roses       

Ernest Dowson (1867-1900) trans Horace

And there was his house, clear against the skyline:

A solid-looking, stone-built place, fenced about with split oak

Neil Curry’s translation of The Odyssey: The Bending of the Bow.

When all the hills are flat, / and all the seas run dry…              

Anon

Poetry Hub at the Faversham Literary Festival: this Saturday, 24th Feb

At 11am this Saturday I am thrilled to be reading with two powerfully talented poets Bethany Goodwill and David Dykes at the Poetry Hub in Faversham’s gorgeous, medieval Guildhall in the centre of town. I’ve been having fun with poems this morning, gathering some new and a couple of old favourites, and can’t wait for us to lead off what should be a really exciting day of poetry – the full line-up is here. The Faversham Literary Festival is outstanding this year, again – congratulations to Amanda, Mark, Will, Megan and the team on enriching our literary lives so beautifully.