Leaf Author's Page
Margaret Eddershaw
| Margaret Eddershaw was a professional actor and University teacher of theatre in Britain for 25 years. She has published on Bertolt Brecht and Constantin Stanislavski, and several of her plays have been performed at the Edinburgh Festival and in London fringe theatres. In 1995, Margaret moved to Greece, and first began writing poetry as a means of coming to terms with her sister's murder in December that year. Since then, ninety of her poems have appeared in magazines and anthologies, and Peer Poetry published her collection, Spectators' View, in 2002. She has given readings in Athens and London. |
Was published in -
Standing on the Cast Iron Shore
and Other Poems
ISBN 978-1-905599-45-5
£7.99 (plus £1 p&p)
Order from Leaf Books and pay with PayPal (Accepts credit and debit cards. No account needed.)
looking for a man to make you whole.
Here are a hundred of them, perfectly formed.
These men will never let you down,
or give you a load of grief.
They’ll stay around.
Time and tide wait for no man.
So take one, quick.
They’ll love you like no other can.
Extract from winning entry ‘Standing on the Cast-Iron
Shore’ by Kathy Miles.
Standing on the Cast-Iron Shore and Other Poems
contains the winning entries from the Leaf Books Poetry
Competition 2008: they comprise thirty-three of the
most tantalising verses about iron men, deceptive
uncles, egregious myna birds and macadamia nut
steamers that you could ever hope to encounter.
The Leaf Books team was aided in the judging of this
competition by the poet Sheenagh Pugh.
Outbox and other poems
Poetry Anthology
Price £7.99 + £1 p&p
Format: Demy
82 Pages
ISBN: 9781905599356
Order from Leaf Books and pay with PayPal (Accepts credit and debit cards. No account needed.)
Outbox and Other Poems contains the winning entries from the Leaf Books Open Poetry Competition that ran during the winter of 2006. The thirty poems within cover such diverse subjects as love and hate, boat-building and ghostly rats, dreamfishers, funerals and science classes. What unites them is their brilliance.

