Category: Anthology

Wild Women, the new anthology by Mor Poets

We’re thrilled to announce that on June 19th 2026, we will be publishing Wild Women, the gorgeous and thrilling new anthology by Mor Poets!

Wild Women celebrates those women who, flawed but unbowed, rise from life’s wreckage and carry its stories in their bones. 

This poetry walks the cliffs of Cornwall with salt in its hair and defiance in its stride. These voices cannot be ignored: here is survival, solidarity, and the strength of women’s shared stories. 

From the all-female Mor Poets collective comes this hard-hitting, generous and tender anthology written from the front line of their lived experience. These poems, as diverse and wide-ranging as the poets themselves, move through birth and motherhood, heartbreak and healing, disbelief and anger, and the quieter ache of loss and grief. Anchored in Cornwall’s own rugged and enduring landscape, these words challenge silencing and shame; speaking truth above all.

Ella Walsworth-Bell set up the Mor Poets as a women’s poetry collective within Cornwall. As a child, Ella washed up in Falmouth after crossing the Atlantic in a sailing boat with her parents. She works as a speech therapist for the NHS and prioritizes inclusivity to maintain diversity both at work and within writing networks. Members of the Mor Poets are also involved within Cornwall Writers and Falmouth Poetry Group; many are well-published themselves in magazines and anthologies.

The Mor Poets


Morvoren: the poetry of sea swimming (2021) is an anthology giving voice to women sea swimmers of Cornwall, including photographic images. Mordardh: surf poetry (2022) is an anthology supported by Arts Council England that also included workshops and live events. Mordros: sound of the sea (2023) was supported by FEAST and incorporates children’s writing – this was shortlisted for a Holyer an Gof award. Mordros also toured with Carn to Cove as a theatre production incorporating poetry from all three books and starring Fi Read, Kate Barden, Hannah Temme and Ella Walsworth-Bell. The Mor Poets shared their words at Creative Scilly, Penzance Litfest, Looe Festival of Words, Falmouth Fringe and St Ives Festival. They have featured on BBC Spotlight, Radio Cornwall and in their own regular slot on CHBN community radio.


Wild Women is due to be published by Inkfish in June 2026 and is an anthology created to showcase poetry authored by women poets in Cornwall – this includes poems by Ella Frears, Sue Wallace-Shaddad, Sue Johns, Ulrike Duran Bravo, Christiana Symmons, Angela Stoner, Morag Smith, Megan Chapman, and Abigail Ottley.

North Cornwall Book Festival

We’re looking forward to this lovely panel event, Cream of Cornish, in which Peter McAllister will lead a discussion of Cornwall in Short with fellow anthology authors Shelley Trower, Clare Howdle and Kate Horsley at North Cornwall Book Festival in just over a week at 10-11am 27 September.

Join Peter McAllister and other writers who contributed to the 2025 Holyer an Gof shortlisted anthology, Cornwall in Short. With Gripping stories that showcase fresh and established talents alike, Cornwall in Short engages with folklore, history, architecture, and landscapes in an emotionally compelling thrust that celebrates a love of all things Cornwall.

The event will feature Peter McAllister, Clare Howdle, Shelley Trower, and Kate Horsley.

Penzance Literary Festival

Penzance Litfest Panel Event

Our co-founder and editor, Peter McAllister, will be leading a discussion with Jackie Taylor, Rob Magnuson Smith, Adrian Markle and Emma Timpany at Penzance Litfest, & they’ll be reading from our Holyer an Gof Publishers’ Awards-shortlisted anthology, Cornwall In Short!

Book here: buff.ly/H8AWToG

Cornwall in Short Book Launch

Join editors Peter McAllister and Kate Horsley, along with a number of contributing writers at this, the launch of Cornwall in Short. Authors such as Tim Hannigan, Emma Timpany, Rob Magnuson Smith, Adrian Markle and Clare Howdle feature in this collection of Cornish writing. Hear some of them read their work at this event before taking part in a short Q&A.

Cornwall in Short

A Collection of Cornish Writing

Edited by Kate Horsley and P.T. McAllister

Print & eBook editions released 14th December 2024

Our second edition celebrated Cornish writers and artists and was so lovely to assemble that we decided to release the prose from it as a paper anthology, to be released in December, with a reading event in Cornwall. Below is a little more detail about this fantastic short story collection.

On the rocks at Carne, flotsam washes in alongside memories of lost love. A family picnic at Lostwithiel leads to the rediscovery of ancient Cornish language stories. In The Three Ferrets at St Ives, a weary barmaid dreams of sailing away on a yacht with a dubious stranger, and a man in search of love is tricked by the Queen of Fey at Rough Tor.

This captivating anthology showcases Cornwall’s most exciting contemporary writers, both established and emerging. This is an amazing range of new short stories and non-fiction that makes Cornwall feel fresh and unexpected; writing that engages with folklore, history, and landscape in an emotionally compelling way, celebrating a love of Cornish history and wildlife. Moving through time and space with each story, you’ll find contemporary retellings of folklore, compelling memoirs, and flash fictions that brim with tension and discovery.

Authors in this Anthology: Rebecca Johnson BistaAnastasia Gammon, Tim Hannigan, Kate Horsley, Clare Howdle, Adrian Markle, Tim Martindale, P. T. McAllister, Rob Magnuson Smith, Mark Plummer, Katherine Stansfield, Jackie Taylor, Karen Taylor, Shelley Trower, Emma Timpany, Tom Vowler, Ella Walsworth-Bell, Elaine Ruth White and Becky Wildman.

Inkfish Press

Inkfish Press

Cornwall in Short

A Collection of Cornish Writing

PRAISE FOR CORNWALL IN SHORT

“Quality storytelling from terrific writers. The collection has ghosts and storms, love challenged and rewarded, triumphs and heartaches, ancient Cornish traditions, vivid characters, wild seas and lands and skies. I jumped from one story to the next, happy for each adventure.”Martin Goodman, BMA Book award winning author of Suffer & Survive and On Bended Knees

“What a joy to read a collection of short stories with such freshness and sense of adventure!” –Mick Jackson, Booker and Whitbread shortlisted author of The Underground Man and Ten Sorry Tales

“A compelling collection in which each story captures something different about the dynamic interaction between people and places.” Professor Lynne Pearce, author of Drivetime and Romance Writing

“This brilliantly diverse collection beckons the reader back and forth over the Tamar, in behind closed doors and down unfamiliar street passages, over to fenced-off mineshafts and shallow waters where loss is confronted and the tantalising lure of escapism awaits.” Aspier Magazine

Qfund blue logo small

Our second edition celebrated Cornish writers and artists and was so lovely to assemble that we decided to release the prose from it as a paper anthology, with generous support from the Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch Memorial Fund Award.

On the rocks at Carne, flotsam washes in alongside memories of lost love. A family picnic at Lostwithiel leads to the rediscovery of ancient Cornish language stories. In The Three Ferrets at St Ives, a weary barmaid dreams of sailing away on a yacht with a dubious stranger, and a man in search of love is tricked by the Queen of Fey at Rough Tor.

This captivating anthology showcases Cornwall’s most exciting contemporary writers, both established and emerging. This is an amazing range of new short stories and non-fiction that makes Cornwall feel fresh and unexpected; writing that engages with folklore, history, and landscape in an emotionally compelling way, celebrating a love of Cornish history and wildlife. Moving through time and space with each story, you’ll find contemporary retellings of folklore, compelling memoirs, and flash fictions that brim with tension and discovery.

Cover Design: The work of our cover artist is rooted in the Cornish landscape. Mark Holman’s creative practice draws on parallel lives as a horticulturalist and visual artist. His beautiful ink drawing of a foxglove growing on the coast of Marazion reflects his work on sustainability and the entanglement of humans and plants within the environment.