My profile

Biography

Kim Moore’s first pamphlet If We Could Speak Like Wolves was a winner in the 2011 Poetry Business Pamphlet Competition, and went on to be shortlisted for the Michael Marks Award and the Lakeland Book of the Year. Her first full length collection The Art of Falling (Seren 2015) won the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize. Her second collection All The Men I Never Married was published by Seren in 2021 and won the 2022 Forward Prize for Best Collection. Her first non-fiction book What The Trumpet Taught Me was published by Smith/Doorstop in May 2022.

She won an Eric Gregory Award and the Geoffrey Dearmer Prize in 2010 and was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best Poem in 2015. She won the 2020 Ledbury Poetry Competition and was placed third in the 2021 Mslexia Poetry Competition.

Her work has been translated into many languages as part of the Versopolis project and she was a judge for the 2018 National Poetry Competition and the 2020 Forward Prizes.

She was awarded a Vice-Chancellor’s Bursary in 2016 to carry out PhD research at Manchester Metropolitan University, and completed her doctorate in ‘Poetry and Everyday Sexism’ at Manchester Metropolitan University in March 2020.

She is the co-director of Kendal Poetry Festival and hosts a monthly reading series for Wordsworth Grasmere as well as running regular writing workshops for young people and adults.

She was a judge for the 2018 National Poetry Competition and the 2020 Forward Prizes. 

Interests and expertise

I teach poetry across undergraduate and postgraduate levels. My research interests are gender, sexism, the body, desire and class. I am also particularly interested in creative-critical research, creative non-fiction and hybrid writing, specifically the lyric essay. 

Research outputs

Moore, K.,  (2022) What the Trumpet Taught Me. Smith/Doorstop.

Moore, K.,  (2021) All the Men I Never Married. Seren Books.

Moore, K.,  (2015 The Art of Falling. Seren Books.

Moore, K.,  (2011) If We Could Speak Like Wolves. Smith/Doorstop.

Career history