sprout contributors

madhur anand

Madhur Anand is the author of the book of poems A New Index for Predicting Catastrophes (McClelland & Stewart / PHRC, 2015) and the memoir This Red Line Goes Straight to Your Heart (Strange Light/ PHRC, 2020), both highly acclaimed and considered trailblazing in their synthesis of art and science. Her second collection of poems will be published by McClelland & Stewart in Spring 2022.

pippin anderson

Pippin Anderson, a lecturer at the University of Cape Town, is an African urban ecologist who enjoys the untidiness of cities where society and nature must thrive together.

erica bartholomae

As a rehabilitating people pleaser, prone to big feelings and at times excessive daydreaming, Erica turned to poetry to help her cope, change habits, reflect, reframe and perhaps reinvent her life. Erica has been writing poetry for three years now but has only recently understood the importance of a poem reaching a reader. She loves slow roasted parsnips, those colour separation dots printed on the selvedge of patterned fabric, the smell of lemon verbena and a child’s curious questions.

dylan brennan

In 2019 Ireland Professor of Poetry Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin awarded Dylan Brennan the Ireland Chair of Poetry Bursary Award. His debut poetry collection, Blood Oranges, was published by The Dreadful Press in 2014 and was awarded the Patrick Kavanagh Award runner-up prize.

niamh mac cabe

Niamh Mac Cabe is an award-winning writer, published in many journals and anthologies including Narrative Magazine, The Stinging Fly, Mslexia, Southword, Wasafiri, No Alibis Press, The Irish Independent, The London Magazine, Aesthetica, The Lonely Crowd, Lighthouse, Structo, The Forge Literary Magazine, Fictive Dream, Bare Fiction, tears-in-the-fence, and The Bristol Prize Anthology.

lindsay campbell

Lindsay K. Campbell is a research social scientist with the USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station. She is based at the New York City Urban Field Station, a partnership between the Forest Service and the NYC Department of Parks & Recreation. Her current research explores the dynamics of urban politics, stewardship, and sustainability policymaking.

david capps

David Capps is a philosophy professor and writer living in New Haven, CT. He is the author of six chapbooks: Poems from the First Voyage (The Nasiona Press, 2019), A Non-Grecian Non-Urn (Yavanika Press, 2019), Colossi (Kelsay Books, 2020), On the Great Duration of Life (Schism Neuronics, 2023), Fever in Bodrum (Bottlecap Press, 2024), and Wheatfield with a Reaper (Akinoga Press, forthcoming). His latest work is featured in Impost, Bombay Gin, The Classical Outlook, and Midnight Chem.

christine coates

Christine Coates is a poet and writer from Cape Town. She has three collections of poetry: Homegrown, published in 2014 by Modjaji Books, received an honourable mention from the Glenna Luschei Prize. FIRE DROUGHT WATER was published by Damselfly Books, 2018, and The Summer We didn’t Die by Modjaji Books, 2020.

sapriya kaur dhaliwal

Supriya Kaur Dhaliwal was born in the Himalayan town of Palampur, India. She studied at St. Bede’s College, Shimla; Trinity College, Dublin; and Queen’s University, Belfast. Her poems have been translated into Arabic, German, Italian; and have appeared in Ambit, Banshee, Cyphers, Gutter, Madras Courier, Poetry Ireland Review, Poetry Jukebox, Poetry London, Rattle, The Bombay Literary Magazine, The Irish Times, The Lifeboat, The Lonely Crowd, The Pickled Body, The Tangerine and elsewhere. Her upcoming book of poems is called The Yak Dilemma and will be published by Makina Press, London later this year.

thomas ellison

Thomas Ellison sometimes writes poems and makes music. Originally from near Leeds, England, he is currently in Berlin.

kate feld

Kate Feld writes essays, poetry, fiction and work that sits between forms. Her writing has appeared in journals and anthologies including Hotel, The Stinging Fly, and The Letters Page. She lives in Manchester, UK.

jessica foley

Jessica Foley (she/her) is a poet and visual artist living in Dublin. She is the founder and facilitator of Engineering Fictions, a conversation and writing workshop designed to support transdisciplinary curiosity, creativity, and listening.

claudia luna fuentes

Claudia Luna Fuentes. (Monclova, Coahuila. Mexico. June 3, 1969). She has published The fruits of the sun (Castillo MacMillan 2005) children’s book and poetry collections among which are Casa de sol (FECA- CONACULTA 1995), Noise of ants (Gatsby Ediciones, 2005), Meat for flowers, personal anthology (Aullido Libros, Spain 2011), The flowers draw their thorns, a personal anthology (Ministry of Culture of Coahuila, 2013) and Where the skin (Mantis Editores / CONARTE, 2019). Appears in Mexican Poetry Yearbook (Fondo de Cultura Económica, 2006). She is a communicator. Director of Scientific Dissemination at the Museum of the Desert. Master in History of Contemporary Society (Universidad Iberoamericana).

dick gleeson

Dick Gleeson is a professional urban planner and collaborative urbanist, and a committed advocate for sustainability. During his tenure as Dublin City Planner (2004-14), he championed the “6 Urban Themes” as a way to think holistically and apply a systems approach to shaping cities. He had responsibility for strategic forward planning of the city, and championed systems thinking, sustainability, and urbanism. He believes planners must be proactive, embrace complexity, and have the agility to step from the strategic to the local. He has led interdisciplinary teams on the review of the Dublin City Development Plan, the Dublin Docklands SDZ, and managed Dublin’s Urban Advisory Plan from 1996-2004. Dick Gleeson believes in the power of the public realm to underpin a rich public life and thinks accessible “Infrastructure” both hard and soft, is the key component to the quality of urban life. He is an active member of IC70, an interdisciplinary group looking at the 7 major Irish cities to 2070.

tom grey

Tom graduated from DIT Bolton Street in 1998 with an honours degree in Architecture. He moved to New Zealand in 2003 to complete a two-year Masters (Sustainability of the Built Environment) at the University of Auckland. With over 10 years in architectural practice working on projects in Ireland, the UK, Croatia, the US and NZ, Tom joined TrinityHaus Research Centre in TCD as a Research Fellow in 2009. Since then he has undertaken a variety of urban design and building design research projects exploring the relationship between the urban built environment and health, inclusion, resilience, sustainability, and climate change. All of these projects are underpinned by people-centred design, Universal Design, co-creation, and stakeholder engagement.

bram gunther

Bram Gunther is writing a climate change novel called Softsole Monument. He was former Chief of Forestry, Horticulture, and Natural Resources for the New York City Parks Department, Co-founder of the Natural Areas Conservancy, and is now starting a company that will transform lawns into native habitat. He lives in the burbs of New York City.

kate horowitz

Kate Horowitz is an essayist, poet, and science writer. Her work has most recently appeared in Rogue Agent and Moonchild Magazine. You can find her at katehorowitz.net, on Twitter: @delight_monger, and on Instagram: @kate_swriting. Kate likes moss and rain and little bats with big ears. She lives by the sea.

tricia knoll

Tricia Knoll is a Vermont poet who lives in the woods. Her work appears widely in journals and anthologies – and seven collections. One Bent Twig (FutureCycle Press, 2023) contains poems that highlight trees she has planted, loved, or worried about due to climate change. Her book How I Learned To Be White received the 2018 In Human Relations Indie Book Award for Motivational Poetry. Knoll is a Contributing Editor to Verse Virtual. Website: triciaknoll.com

deborah leipziger

Deborah Leipziger is a poet, author, and advisor on sustainability. Her chapbook, Flower Map, was published by Finishing Line Press. Born in Brazil, Ms. Leipziger is the author of several books on sustainability. Thrice nominated for a Pushcart Prize, her poems have been published in literary magazines in six countries.

christodoulos makris

Christodoulos Makris has published three books of poetry—most recently this is no longer entertainment: A Documentary Poem (Dostoyevsky Wannabe, 2019)—as well as several pamphlets, artists’ books and other poetry objects. He is the poetry editor at gorse journal and associated imprint Gorse Editions.

lianne o’hara

Lianne O’Hara is a poet and writer. Her work is published or forthcoming in Poetry Ireland Review, Banshee, Queering the Green: Post-2000 Queer Irish Poetry, Skylight 47, Washing Windows Too, Beir Bua, The Honest Ulsterman, and elsewhere. Her work has been shortlisted for the 2021 Bridport Prize and 2019 National Poetry Competition. She lives in Dublin, where she teaches creative writing.

lea marshall

Lea Marshall’s poetry is forthcoming in RiseUp Review and The Ecopoetry Anthology Volume III. She was a finalist for Shenandoah’s Graybeal-Gowen Prize for Virginia Poets, and her poetry has appeared in A-Minor, failbetter, BOAAT Journal, Linebreak, Unsplendid, Hayden’s Ferry Review, B O D Y, Diode Poetry Journal, Thrush Poetry Journal, Broad Street Magazine, and elsewhere.

koleka putuma

Koleka Putuma is an award-winning poet, playwright and theatre director. Her bestselling debut collection of poems Collective Amnesia is taking the South African literary scene by storm. Since its publication in April 2017, the book is in its 10th print run and is prescribed for study at tertiary level in South African Universities and Gothenburg University in Sweden.

steven salmoni

Steven Salmoni’s is the author of A Day of Glass (Chax Press, 2020). He received a Ph.D. from Stony Brook University and is currently the Department Chair of English at Pima Community College in Tucson, AZ. He also serves on the Board of Directors for POG, a Tucson-based literary organization.

dave seter

Dave Seter is the author of Don’t Sing to Me of Electric Fences (Cherry Grove Collections 2021). His poems and critical works have appeared in Cider Press Review, Paterson Literary Review, Raven Chronicles, and other journals. He has earned degrees in civil engineering (Princeton University) and humanities (Dominican University of California).
website: daveseter.com

kate siklosi

Kate Siklosi lives, thinks, and creates in Dish With One Spoon Territory / Toronto, Canada. Her work includes leavings (Timglaset 2021), selvage (forthcoming, Invisible 2023), and six chapbooks of poetry. She holds a PhD in English Literature from York University, and her critical and creative work has been featured in various magazines, journals, and small press publications across North America, Europe, and the UK. She is also a co-founding editor of Gap Riot Press, a feminist experimental poetry small press.

caitlin stobie

Caitlin Stobie is a Wellcome Trust ISSF Fellow at the University of Leeds. Her writing has appeared in Berfrois, Flash: The International Short-Short Story Magazine, Plumwood Mountain, Tears in the Fence, Zoomorphic, and elsewhere. She is an editorial assistant at Stand and a Visiting Lecturer in Creative Writing at Leeds Arts University.

elizabeth trew

Elizabeth Trew was born and grew up in Cape Town, then left and returned to South Africa after decades away. Her poems are published in numerous poetry journals and anthologies. Her debut collection, My Mother the Seal (Hands-On Books) was published in 2023. A former adult education teacher in cities in England and in Johannesburg, she volunteers at a shelter for girls in Cape Town. She is a keen mountain walker and draws inspiration from the natural world.

innocent mwendo tuyisenge

Innocent Tuyisenge is a young Congolese man who volunteers with non-profit associations such as Amani Institute ASBL and IPDD ASBL. The 24-year-old literature buff lives in Goma in the eastern region of the Democratic Republic of Congo. His collection of poems has garnered a number of awards. He won first prize (the Alphonse de Lamartine Prix) at the Jeux Floraux du Béarn, a poetry contest held in Pau, and second prize (Business Pitch) at the Innovation Fair in North Kivu. He was the DRC’s 2021 winner of the Blog4dev competition, an annual writing contest organized by the World Bank. He won the prize for poetry at the third staging of the Art for Peace competition organized by the Kizito Mihigo Foundation in Rwanda, and was awarded the Jury Prize at the Grand Prix Martial Nsinda de la Poésie Francographe 2023.

sarah de villiers

Sarah de Villiers is an architect and designer, based in Johannesburg. Her work questions money borders, and the spatially detectable abstractions of power and economy. She co-leads GSA Unit 18 at the Graduate School of Architecture at the University of Johannesburg and contributes as a director at spaceKIOSK.

ivan vladislavić

Ivan Vladislavić is the author of The Restless Supermarket, The Exploded View, Portrait with Keys, Double Negative, The Distance and other books. His published works include novels, collections of short stories, and essays on art, writing and city life. His work has won many awards including the Sunday Times Fiction Prize and the Windham-Campbell Prize for fiction. He lives in Johannesburg where he is a distinguished professor in creative writing at the University of the Witwatersrand.

joanna walsh

Joanna Walsh is a multidisciplinary writer for print, digital and performance. The author of seven books, she also works as a critic, editor and teacher. She is the recipient of the 2020 Markievicz Award in the Republic of Ireland, a UK Arts Foundation fellow, and the founder of #readwomen, described by the New York Times as “a rallying cry for equal treatment for women writers”. Her next book Seed will be published by No Alibis Press in June both as a paperback and as a reconfigurable artist’s book. You can read “Thicket” here.