Poetry Books

I am a published author and several of my dramatic pieces have been performed at various events. These have been extremely well-received and reviewed. I am available for commission work and ghostwriting projects. Please contact me if you wish to discuss anything.

Anchor and Wing

Purchase price £8.99 + delivery
(£2.95 to UK, Please enquire for International) 

Anchor & Wing: Poems from the Periphery

After the success of my first book ERIMOS which received better reviews than I could have hoped for and was long-listed to the top 25 for the International Poetry Book Award, publisher and supporter of my writing Peter Thabit Jones offered to published my second book through his wonderful The Seventh Quarry Press.  And so here it is.

The Seventh Quarry Press website describes the book as “A very impressive collection of poems” and that “Mark’s poetic voice is original and powerful.” 

“Yet they are so much more now –

umbilical, both anchor and wing,

a bookmark of captured time, chapters

in a life, echoes when the river washed 

you and winds soothed your skin cooling

beneath hot sun, burst of berry on your lips, 

hush of hammocking in tranquillity.”

Extract from Pressed Flowers © Mark Lewis 

It is a collection of 47 poems, including the International Welsh Poetry prize -winning poem Notes from a Transported Convict.  The collection explores a variety of subjects including the natural world and environmental challenges, homelessness, male toxicity and political issues such as immigration and ongoing wars, as well as more personal poems based around my dad who died in 2023, coming to terms with grief, Dylan Thomas and my wife, Emma.  

“And this is the joy of Anchor and Wing, the enduring possibility of comfort through human connection, shared loss or renewed perspective on the bittersweet complexities of our world. It feels hopeful and inclusive at a time when it is all too easy to submit to despair… Anchor and Wing establishes Mark Lewis as a lyrical wordsmith, with a deep love of language rooted in the bardic heritage of Wales, though shapeshifting, taking flight, as blackbird, robin or firefly. He is clearly a poet’s poet and a human’s human, ‘heart buzzing like a bombilation of bees’.”

Extract from the book review by poet and translator Emma Baines.  The full review is below and I am hugely grateful to Emma for her review. I am also grateful to my wife, Emma (so many Emmas!) for the beautiful cover photograph.

Limited copies of the book are available via this website £8.99 + £2.95 to UK. (Please contact for international delivery).  Payment via Paypal. If you would like the book signed, please let me know to whom you would like it inscribed.  Thank you!

Anchor & Wing Review

Book Review:  Emma Baines, poet and translator.

From the opening title in Anchor and Wing, award-winning writer Mark Lewis finds himself among the gods of Welsh poetry. Dylan Thomas, R.S. Thomas, Taliesin and Hedd Wyn rise iconic in a ‘breaking light’ but simmer too through the familiarity of ‘bubbling cockles’, swirl in the smoke from a ‘cadged cigarette’ then ultimately return to a ‘holy darkness’. As such, In the Beginning was the Word serves as both Lewis’ Genesis and touchstone to the wonders of inspiration and being human, cut to reveal something fleshy and tangible that brings poems and poet to life from the off.

If the bards are his anchors, then love and death, the birds, the sea and their song are the wings on which these poems fly. All the stuff of art and life is here, uniquely crafted to allow Lewis’ own voice to sing. Yet everything in this collection feels also like a conversation, a move towards understanding that is timeless, connected and transcends the individual. In Birdwatching this is keenly expressed through a murmuration of starlings ‘unshackled’ by the ‘constraints of time’, yet wise to shifting seasons. From this elevation, awe becomes visible through the ‘inflorescence of flowers’ or whispering grasses. Death is a ‘change of airs’, a shift, made less final with the presence of a bone-handled whittling knife ‘history notched in fingerprints’. And this is the joy of Anchor and Wing, the enduring possibility of comfort through human connection, shared loss or renewed perspective on the bittersweet complexities of our world. It feels hopeful and inclusive at a time when it is all too easy to submit to despair.

As the collection soars it refuses to be pinned down. There is magic, incantation even, as Lewis summons ‘wisdom smoked out, guilt marked by lavender and sage’ in the poem Black Cat, or through the mantra ‘sing me’ repeated in Birdsong, an essential manifestation of joy as a kind of survival instinct. However, the poems never drift into abstraction but are tempered by a fleshiness that gives them heft. The black cat has a ‘muzzle matted raw with rage’ and the ‘magic’ of renewal after death or each spring emerges from ‘worm fat soils turned writhe of roots to rise’ in Shadows.

The subtitle Poems from the Periphery perhaps gives the best indication of where their power truly lies. It is in the connections we are losing touch with- our animal selves, the increasingly indistinguishable links to our environment, the unacknowledged wildlife surrounding us and the common ground with those we push to the fringes of society. Not satisfied with nudging our gaze however, Lewis reaches in and drags out the humble, ugly beauty of everything we have forgotten or try to ignore, and these are the most raw and confronting poems of all. In Bird he refuses to shy away from a creature ‘gibbeted on a barbed wire fence, beak bound / ancient nobility bleached from your face’, summoning the poetic spirit of Ted Hughes. In Last Orders, a man with ‘skin the texture of a gutted fish’ is ruler of his own time and kingdom, (rooted in a grittiness that transcends our Instagram unreality), while in Cityscape, nature prevails, angry and determined as ‘earth blossoms fiery through the fists of a rose’.

This is a collection that celebrates the wild joy of living in all its forms. Love and humanity emerge in both the acceptance or expression of things as they really are and through a tenderness most evident in the poems of love and grief. Anchor and Wing establishes Mark Lewis as a lyrical wordsmith, with a deep love of language rooted in the bardic heritage of Wales, though shapeshifting, taking flight, as blackbird, robin or firefly. He is clearly a poet’s poet and a human’s human, ‘heart buzzing like a bombilation of bees’.

Poems

Anchor and Wing

Caitlin

This poem appears in Anchor & Wing and is one of three Dylan related poems in the book.  The poem was selected as part of the translation project with Timisoara University in Romania.

Caitlin

 your eyes fill with butterflies.

naked as a winter branch

you ebb and flow,

the man in the moon blushes,

dons his wispy shrouds.

in dawn’s fecund dance

violins legato leaves

curlew calls acapella

herons hold their harmony.

river bleeds through salty veins,

hills halo hips,

the valley of thigh births movement,

arms aloft conduct cloud,

hands homage reverence,

you flame the morning,

draw blood from the rising sun,

dip toes in the bless of dew.

crows siren to warning,

prepare, your eyes entreat, prepare,

the reaper of rhythm awakes.

you gift your soul

to the water and air, lark

and mark the muds, waiting

to be washed away, always away

by the merciless curl of a word

 

© Mark Lewis 2026

 

Anchor and Wing

Shelter

This poem appears in Anchor & Wing and iis inspired by seeing a homeless man living rough, his face a mixture of desperation and resignation.

Shelter

Thrown from shops

like a bucket of slops.

Dog-shit streets, neon puddled

with piss.

 

You stumble.

 

Lights of bars rain starry.

Undertaker’s hour.

A place perhaps to sleep and, after,

bestial boots of boozers.

 

Trapped in your shadow,

clinging to the scaffold

with filthy fingertips.

Cardboard wrapped,

red biddy blooded,

keep the chill out.

 

Once you dragged a dying dog

from the gutter, fur matted,

blood stiff as a broom.

You gave each other warmth,

foul breath in yesterday’s news.

 

Don’t ask of me, don’t ask.

I’ve seen too much.

 

Your life, a fable of forgotten suns.

 

Buried beneath beetle,

the north wind carrying daggers.

Dusked doorways,

fog of passing hours

lost to the skies.

Only the angle of the sun changes

in your noonday glooms.

 

I am a stranger, welcome me.

Break bread and clothe me.

The fox in his hole, the bird in its nest and yet –

my head rests on this gravestone of anxious night.

 

Cough crimson into a sleeve.

Invisible, a fly husking in a web.

 

Open wide, brother, open wide.

 

Your eyes, fingerprints of dying stars.

A moth devours the rags

you wear as scars.

© Mark Lewis 2026

 

Anchor and Wing

Trade

This poem appears in Anchor & Wing and is my take on how goverments across the world trade arms for people. 

Trade

Scourged his rack of ribs

beneath hovering of vulture,

carrion feeders feast, wolves scenting.

Lack of limb renders stillness

numb. No fingers remain

to pluck clouds free of rain–

a final thirst unquenched.

 

This marketplace of bodies

blenched flour white, red as anger’s eyes,

chest emblazoned with wound of petals

stemmed from brutal barb of bullet.

Eyeless, no rise of sun, no hovering of angels,

a mouth struck dumb

by the philosophy of violence.

Coin exchanged for heartbeats,

discount for delivery of the young.

 

In silence

the mute slide by, eyeing.

 

Hear a sermon offered to the worms,

echo of gunshot given for the dying.

No words offer a bargaining plea for mercy.

Just the hush of refutation.

Battalions of maggots overwhelm

this land of bones

imprinted in the dust.

 

This marketplace a cemetery,

payment for admission

accepted only in souls.

No refunds given.

 

© Mark Lewis 2026