Winner of the 2021 Gregory O’Donoghue International Poetry Prize, and the 2023 Liverpool Poetry Prize, and twice short-listed for the prestigious Eric Gregory Award for young poets, Nicholas Hogg's debut collection, Missing Person, is published by Broken Sleep Books.
Groundhog Sonnet was highly commended in the Hammond House literary prize.
And Other Poems featured IOU in Issue Five.
Snooker was a commended poem in the Waltham Forest poetry competition, adjudicated by Jacqueline Saphra.
Naked appeared in the inaugural publication of The Marrow, a brand new poetry journal from Sydney, Australia.
Glitch, a tribute to the late poet, John Burnside, can be read online at The London Magazine.
Scotland’s leading literary magazine, Gutter, featured the poem J in their Spring 2024 edition.
The Wisden Cricket Quarterly published Catch in issue 46.
Two poems, Simon and Icarus, appeared in the 11th edition of Strix, a beautifully produced journal available to purchase here.
Crusade was chosen by Mary O’Donnell for issue 142 of Poetry Ireland Review.
Swimming with Horses, the title poem of Nicholas Hogg’s forthcoming second collection, was runner up in the Guernsey Literary Festival competition, adjudicated by Paul Muldoon.
Hitchhiker was a Poem of the Week in the Guardian. ‘Hitchhiker combines two effects that poetry often keeps apart from each other: muscle-tensing narrative anticipation, and epiphany.’
Two poems, Mowde Bush Stone and Rumours, feature in issue 31 of Under the Radar.
Ghost and Chrome recounts a motorbike journey Nicholas made across the Australian Outback in 1995, and is published by the King’s College poetry journal, Wild Court.
Missing Person, the title poem of Nicholas’s debut collection, won the 2023 Liverpool Poetry Prize. The contest was judged by the acclaimed Mersey Sound poet, Brian Patten.
The spring issue of the Lincoln Review featured Road Closed.
Royalty and Heatwave, were published in the April issue of Bad Lilies, with new poems by Julian Stannard, Maria Taylor, Fiona Larkin, Michelle Penn, Catherine Rockwood, and Sean O’Brien.
Facade was shortlisted by judge Jane Commane in the Wolverhampton Literary Festival Poetry Prize.
Published in the Shelter-themed issue of Finished Creatures, Trespass appears alongside work from Penelope Shuttle, Katrina Naomi, Claire Dyer, and Richard Skinner.
UFO features in the March issue of Poetry London, with new poems by Karen Solie, Oli Hazzard, Jane Hirshfield, Randall Horton, D.S. Marriott, Qudsia Akhtar, Christopher Merrill, and Eleni Sikelianos, among others.
Commended by judges Victoria Kennefick and Joshua Bennet, July, was a runner up in the Troubadour International Poetry Prize.
Tupperware was a prize-winner in the Freedom From Torture Poetry Competition, judged by Alan Hollinghurst and Kirsty Allison.
Pyro appeared in issue 68 of The North, guest-edited by Andrew McMillan and Stephanie Sy-Quia.
Runner up in the Wells Festival of Literature Poetry Prize, Calais Pier is inspired by the Turner painting of the same name.
Archway can be read in full at the London Magazine, alongside new and archived poems by Sylvia Plath, Rishi Dastidar, and Simon Armitage et al.
Shooter Literary Magazine included Nicholas’s poem, Mariner, as part of the Way Out West themed edition. This work is a partner poem to 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, published in Issue 8 of Poetry Birmingham Literary Journal.
The Friday Poem chose Phobia as their highlighted work for the last week of August. Reviews included collections by Emily Berry, PJ Harvey, and Dannie Abse.
Broadcast as part of the Rest is History podcast episode about Robin Hood, Longbow was first read by historian, Tom Holland.
Acumen 103 featured War Report, a poem recounting Nicholas’s experience as a press officer for the NGO ship, Peace Boat.
Hitchhiker was a finalist in the 2022 Bedford Poetry Competition.
Haiku, a tribute to Japanese poet, Matsuo Basho, was published in issue 78 of The Interpreter’s House, and Postcard from Blackpool in issue 81.
The Paul Gascoigne inspired poem, Gazza, was selected for issue 44 of The Blizzard.
The February 2022 edition of the Honest Ulsterman published Mason.
Meteor features in the Anthropocene themed Magma, which also includes poems from Zaffar Kunial, Isobel Dixon, and Deryn Rees-Jones.
The Neon Magazine Cities issue published Gulliver.
Lightning On The Sun, a poem about the lost stars of grunge music, was published by The Social to commemorate the 30th anniversary of Nirvana’s Nevermind.
Kayak and Interstellar appear online in Anthropocene.
Butlins features in issue 7 of Bath Magg, alongside work by Maya C Popa, Raymond Antrobus, and Colm Toibin.
Fiji was shortlisted for the 2020 Fish Poetry Prize, adjudicated by Billy Collins.
Mao was animated for the Berlin Poetry Film Festival, and Tattoo was a prizewinner in the Oxo Gallery Art of Love competition.
Northern Lights was published in The New European, and produced as a sound poem by Marcelo De Oliveira.