Overseas Orders
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Annual subscription (4 issues) £15
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Issue Two, £3.50 per copy
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| Issue Three, £3.50 per copy
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| Word Market Special Issue, £3.50 per copy
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| Issue Four, £3.50 per copy
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| Issue Five, £3.50 per copy
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Issue Six, £3.50 per copy
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Issue Seven, £3.50 per copy
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| Issue Eight, £3.50 per copy |
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Issue Nine, £5.00 per copy
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Back Issues
Issue Nine
For the first time in the long and illustrious history of
the Quiet Feather - a COLOUR cover, beautifully illustrated
by Miss Ping/Julie McDermott.
This issue is loosely themed around 'Light' and we've got articles covering the
darkness of surveillance society, the science of light, flaming tea and the
tarnished brilliance of St. Tropez along with the usual wide and wonderful
selection of poems, stories, drawings and photos.
Issue Eight
the Quiet Feather has come over all mountainous to coincide
with the Kendal Mountain Festival. Inside you'll find an interview
with mountain man Chris Bonington, articles on the fragile existence of Altai snow leopards, the addictive terrors of climbing, and an Austin 7 race on Skiddaw, and the usual extraordinary Quiet Feather pick and mix of poetry, short stories and illustration. The little dogs are back too.
Issue Seven
Issue 7, another splendid mishmash: Yeti-hunting and coyotes, a
milkman and a lovesick robot, flotsam and randomness, 9th century
Japanese civil engineering and email spam, tiny tiny dogs and new
carpets.
Issue Six
QF Issue 6 has arrived! Hot-air ballooning and horses, love and death,
Googling and getting back to nature; fiction, cartoons, poetry, photos, essays... it's a hackneyed cliché but for once (well, maybe the third or fourth time), it's true — IT'S ALL HERE, as they said when they discovered the last it mine in Cornwall... Anyone who was at the Green Man Festival back in the now unimaginably luxurious heat of August will enjoy the Jeff Lewis interview, and anyone who wasn't will too, because he's a talented and lovely man, and was kind enough to draw his answers in cartoon-strip format. Honestly, the trouble some people take... We hope you enjoy it...
Click here to see some pages
Issue Five
Features a hand-printed rook on the cover. Issue Five contains William Burrough's Tangiers,
Camp X-Ray, an interview with cartoonist Jeffrey Brown, Joanna Newsom's lyrics, Count Lustig
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the world's greatest ever conman, plus fiction, artwork, poetry and a recipe by members of The
Broken Family Band, Half Cousin, Hush the Many, Danseizure, Tunng and Things in Herds.
Click here to see some pages
Issue Four
Cryogenics in Slovakia, Mushrooms & mushroom-picking, The Third Man, Gigging in Oklahoma City, The Last Supper, Fear of eBay,
Hildebrant & Dug ...and great new fiction & poetry
Word Market Special Issue
Word Market is an annual literature festival in the South Lakes which includes all sorts of readings, workshops and performances.
In 2005 Word Market were kind enough to fund a special festival edition of the Quiet Feather including work from Jo Shapcott and Sarah Hall,
alongside local writers including former contributors to the Quiet Feather like Duncan Darbishire, Beth Broomby and Gill Nicholson. It's a beaut.
Issue 3
Including a self-portrait as a house, a near-miss in Iraq, a
synaesthesiac child, excellent short fiction, a stroll along a
Milanese motorway, plus a word from your temporarily-separated
editors. Click here to see some pages
Issue 2
Including 'reviews on life', a view of Budapest, a poem to take us
deep into space and a poem to take us deep into the past, more
Hildebrandt and Dug, a peculiar story about the renowned Chester
Edvardo, news from the Irish-Italian front, autumn, the meaning of
life, a dismal afternoon, a revelation on the way home from the
bakery, and the sights and colours of Mali. Click here to see some pages
Issue 1 SOLD OUT
Including a photo from Cuba, a song that will
make you long for summer (but not in the way you think), a throwing
down of the gauntlet to the poets of the past, notes from Uganda,
excellent short stories, a poem from the pavement cafés of Milan, an
all-new cartoon strip, a dangerous brush with the Italian press, and
a foray into the genre of found poetry.
Click here to see some pages
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