I began writing in 1988, at the age of 30, after discovering Natalie Goldberg's book, Writing Down the Bones, then took a Diploma in Comparative Literature (1990-1993) with the University of Kent, to fill some of the many gaps in my literary knowledge and understanding, before studying for my Master's Degree in Writing at the University of Glamorgan between 1994 and 1996, working with the celebrated Welsh poet Gillian Clarke.
I taught creative writing on the University of Kent's degree programme between 2000 and 2007 and since 2004 have published and edited seven books in a variety of genres: poetry, fiction, memoir, psychogeography, and local history. My two most recent books, Real Port Talbot (2013 & 2021) and Remembering Morfa (2020) use a recipe of journalism, historical research, poetry, biography, photography and newspaper cuttings to create texts that are both entertaining and informative.
Since 1985 I have lived in Florida, Barcelona and, between 2007 and 2011, in Antibes in the South of France, where I renovated an early 20th century four storey house just 200 metres from Cap d'Antibes and the trickly Mediterranean. These days, I am based in semi-rural Kent at the foot of the North Downs. But several times a year I go back to my hometown to enjoy the sea-breezes and mountains, and to mooch around the town's graveyards listening out for stories to write and share on a variety of Facebook pages dedicated to my 'stories in ink & stone'.