If We Could Speak Like Wolves was a winner in the 2011 Book & Pamphlet Competition, chosen by Carol Ann Duffy, and was selected as one of the Independent's Books of the Year in 2012.
Kim Moore lives in Barrow, Cumbria. She has a PhD from Manchester Metropolitan University, and now works there as a Lecturer in Creative Writing. Her poems have been published in the TLS, Poetry Review, Poetry London, and elsewhere. She regularly appears at festivals and events, her prize-winning pamphlet, If We Could Speak Like Wolves (Smith-Doorstop) was chosen as an Independent Book of the Year in 2012 and was shortlisted for other prizes. Moore won an Eric Gregory Award in 2011 and the Geoffrey Dearmer Prize in 2010. In 2014 she won a Northern Promise award. She writes a thoughtful blog and has a wide social media following. The Art of Falling (Seren) is her debut collection. Her latest poetry collection All The Men I Never Married (Seren, 2021) won the Forward Prize for Best Collection. What The Trumpet Taught Me (Smith/Doorstop, 2022) is her first creative non-fiction book, followed by Are You Judging Me Yet? Poetry and Everyday Sexism (Seren, 2023).
Reflections and lessons learned: “There's a door frame in the channel made of thin black twisted wood When the tide is in, it leads to water. When the tide is out, it leads to mud”
The timing of the prize winning was coincidental in this discovery, but I’m looking forward to the ride… a great introduction to the work with more of a humanistic alongside the nature mix than I expected
It is her assured voice which drives these poems. She uses humour like a weapon. There are some great images and almost every poem reads like an excerpt from a bigger story.
From start to finish Kim writes in a straightforward, hard-hitting yet humorous style that tells stories of life both imagined and real, often based in her Lake District backyard. Beautiful and brutal, yet refreshing view of the world.