Angela Kirby


Angela Kirby is an English poet and non-fiction writer. Shoestring Press have published five of her poetry collections.

Background

Born 4 July 1932 in rural Lancashire, England, the eighth and last child of a cotton-mill owner James Astley Birtwistle and his wife Muriel Mary. An elder sister was the poet and gallery owner, Iris Birtwistle. Her brother Col. Michael Albert Astley Birtwistle was a High Sheriff of Lancashire, and she was a cousin of race horse trainer Monica Dickinson, the mother of Michael Dickinson. She is the grandmother of Marine Sam Alexander killed while on a patrol in 2011 Afghanistan in 2011 by an improvised explosive device.
She was educated by governesses until she was 11, and then at the Convent of the Sacred Heart, Brighton; Rye St Antony, Oxford; and St Mary’s Convent, Ascot. She received her MA from Sussex University in 1998 and DPhil in 2006. Married in 1952 to Royal Naval Officer Giles Kirby with five surviving children.
After her divorce in 1975, Kirby worked as a chef, a garden designer, freelance journalist and non-fiction writer on food and gardening. Her first book, Fast Cook was published by Hutchinson in 1982 and other non-fiction books followed until 1998.
With the encouragement of her sister Iris Birtwistle she began to write poetry as a child and was first published in 1960 but more regularly from 1981. From 1990 she began to concentrate on poetry, becoming published and anthologised, read on BBC TV and Radio 4 and winning the BBC Wildlife Poet of the Year in 1996 and 2001.

Poetry collections