Her first writing success came as a playwright : The Greatest Gift won a Radio Times Drama Award in 1989 and since then her scripts have been serialised on Woman's Hour (BBC), and have received readings and performances in many leading theatres. In 1998 she found success as a poet with Fireclay - winner of a Poetry Business pamphlet award. Heralded by John Walsh in the Independent as the work of "a marvelous new poet" and praised by Vicki Feaver for her "lyrical voice", Norgate's poems explore how: "the precariousness of human experience is balanced by a precisely observed vision of the natural world."
Norgate sees a connection between writing dialogue and writing poetry. She explains: "Radio uses the voice in a similar way to poetry." She also sees a kinship in the way the two mediums function, saying: "poetry and drama have intensity and crystallisation in common, as well as subtext."
Stephanie Norgate's first full length collection Hidden River (2008), was shortlisted for both the Forward First Collection Prize and the Jerwood Aldeburgh First Collection Prize. These poems make invisible inners world concrete and examine our sensuous contact with each other and with nature. Norgate writes movingly on the private rituals of birth, love and loss and how they seem to ghost themselves onto the internal and external landscape.
In this Archive recording you can hear the poignant: 'A perfect example of a paralysed larynx' which is written in response to her father's trip to hospital as a cancer patient. Norgate's illuminating introduction is an interesting examination of the way a poet's mind works, and how much of a poem is unconsciously constructed.
This recording was made on the 11th December, 2008 at the Audio Workshop, London and was produced by Richard Carrington.


