“M.’s story, a book for today, speaks eloquently to our own experience, as great literature is supposed to do.”
Kevin M. F. Platt reviews Maria Stepanova’s “intriguing short novel, written in lyrical, magnificently translated prose."
worldliteraturetoday.org/2026/march/d...
09.03.2026 17:42
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Would you like to stay and write in a global literary hub? Here are the latest opportunities:
1. Residency in Lyon for French-language poetry (dl 28 Feb)
2. Korean–English translation residency in Norwich (dl 9 March)
3. Norwich–Jakarta circular residency (dl 31 March)
buff.ly/vziVRSz
26.02.2026 12:47
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This sold out over the weekend, BUT we do have a few returns – so the last handful of tickets are now available.
If you're in or near Oxford, we do hope you'll join us for this special lecture with Jeffrey Yang!
02.03.2026 13:28
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This sold out over the weekend, BUT we do have a few returns – so the last handful of tickets are now available.
If you're in or near Oxford, we do hope you'll join us for this special lecture with Jeffrey Yang!
02.03.2026 13:28
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The poem is now available to read for free on our website, to make a month since his arrest.
Please do read and share, and help us raise awareness with the international literary community.
modernpoetryintranslation.com/poem/i-used-...
25.02.2026 10:13
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A month has passed since the arrest of Ali Asadollahi in Iran, following nationwide protests.
A steadfast voice for freedom and justice, we published his poem, 'I Used to Dream, I Used to Be Safe,' in MPT 'Rhythms of the Land'.
25.02.2026 10:13
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Only 10 tickets remaining now...
16.02.2026 14:33
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MPT 60th Anniversary Lecture | With Jeffrey Yang
Flower-Covered Grove: The Practice of Poetry and Its Translation
Due to popular demand we’ve released 25 additional places for our previously sold-out 60th anniversary lecture with Jeffrey Yang.
Find out more and book your free place via Eventbrite.
We hope to see you in Oxford in a few weeks' time!
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/mpt-60th-a...
16.02.2026 12:03
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MPT 60th Anniversary Lecture | With Jeffrey Yang
Flower-Covered Grove: The Practice of Poetry and Its Translation
Due to popular demand we’ve released 25 additional places for our previously sold-out 60th anniversary lecture with Jeffrey Yang.
Find out more and book your free place via Eventbrite.
We hope to see you in Oxford in a few weeks' time!
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/mpt-60th-a...
16.02.2026 12:03
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Launching MPT The Antidote to Agony: Focus on the Poetry of Greece and Cyprus
YouTube video by MPT Magazine
ICYMI!
You can now re-watch our December online launch for The Antidote to Agony over on YouTube:
youtu.be/sXppBjX57BI?...
Featuring issue contributors Phoebe Giannisi, Brian Sneeden, Dimitra Kotoula and Maria Nazos, chaired by issue editor Jessica Sequeira
10.02.2026 10:53
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Ugh no
19.12.2025 12:19
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I
I will not repeat Phryni by stripping myself bare before You
— — — —
I confess that I possess the Memory that I am descended
from a generation of poets
The sea buzzes, Homer’s sea foams
with an anger—that I inherit—I do not assuage it —
nor do I incite it but I let it carry me away:
a ravishing and ruthless death I have
O Horror of an immoral destiny whose weight I bear
on my transparent and anaemic back
without promise—nor expectation of light blue horizons—
Memory moves through me like a woman in black
shouting and cursing: A curse, a curse on Beauty
which sucks me up and lightens blue my Black hair
fills it with suns that reap and burn me
Sickles reap me and I shriek.
My Orphic song that you annihilated
and sweetened, You, the ignorant of Proper Sound.
The light blue crystals cut me and I deform.
II
My Eurydical face you redeem with counterfeit gold
You, the ignorant of Beauty, my Traders
You bought out my Happiness
My Hellenic Memory
and abandoned me to my fate of traversing and circling
like a bird—a Free bird.
Who among You will defend,
who will kill
my Freedom?
Who ever killed the Human?
the Human I embody
the Human of mourning
I’m enamoured with her,
I surrender to her,
I birth her the Earthquakes—my poems—
I love her
the human that gestates within me, I love—
'I will not repeat Phryni…'
Iliassa Sequin
Translated from Greek by Calliope Michail
From our (now sold-out) issue: The Antidote to Agony: Focus on the Poetry of Greece and Cyprus
17.12.2025 11:00
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Now SOLD OUT! ❤️
17.12.2025 10:46
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❤️
09.12.2025 15:05
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D'oh!
This should say Thursday 11th December.
Join us!
09.12.2025 14:57
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Reminder!
Online Launch: Thurs 12 Dec
Join us to celebrate the latest issue of MPT, The Antidote to Agony: Focus on the Poetry of Greece and Cyprus
With Phoebe Giannisi, Brian Sneeden, Dimitra Kotoula, Maria Nazos, chaired by issue editor Jessica Sequeira.
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/launching-...
09.12.2025 10:40
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I don’t like polysyllabic words.
Railroads originating in the larynx and terminating at the lips,
a rolling stock of phonemes tearing up tonsils.
Tongue-cutting wire mesh,
tongue twisters slurping up vowel after vowel,
housing complexes blocking airways.
I don’t like polysyllabic words.
It’s hard to fit them into my poems,
they ooze out of verses,
flattening feet.
They trip on the tip of my tongue when Ι mumble them,
hobbling out of my mouth.
The longest word in the Greek language dates back to antiquity and
appears in Aristophanes’s Ekklesiazousai:
raysharkskullbitmixlaserwortcrayfishhoneydrizzlethrushblackbirddove-
pigeonroastedroosterheadwagtailrockdoveharesyrupcrispywingplatter.
In the sixth century AD, Dioscorus of Aphrodito gave us this thirty-
eight-letter mouthful: worthybeastlybirdystarlightcosmication.
In the thirteenth century AD, John Apokaukos called someone a
calculospiriteconomist.
The following two words were passed down to us from the ecclesiastical
tradition of Byzantium: panhyperprotohonoromagnificent and
photoluminoselenophosphorific.
I don’t like polysyllabic words.
This is the polysyllabic word I like the least: thegreekstate.
Polysyllabic Words by Jazra Khaleed
Translated from Greek by Jason Rigas
Featured in the latest MPT: The Antidote to Agony: Focus on the Poetry of Greece and Cyprus
08.12.2025 11:25
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The sea’s remorse
surfaces every time the waves appear.
Not the wild, raging, frightening waves
but the other kind
sweet and soothing, like lullabies.
Ripples of fluid sorrow,
tides of guilt and regret.
Not for those who were lost
in its dark waters
nor for those left behind waiting.
But for those who remained
shipwrecked on land
stranded and drowning,
living their lives without ever
attempting a journey.
'The sea’s remorse
surfaces every time the waves appear.
Not the wild, raging, frightening waves
but the other kind
sweet and soothing, like lullabies.'
*
– The sea’s remorse
Argyris Stavropoulos
Translated from Greek by Gigi Papoulias
modernpoetryintranslation.com/poem/the-sea...
05.12.2025 08:48
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Transhumance I
Phoebe Giannisi
Translated from Greek by Brian Sneeden
for Eleonora and Dimitri
It was I who sent
my treasure
by my own free will
silently I step upon the earth
i.
In the beginning was the grazing
the pasture, sections of earth gathered extended
suffused from rain and the elements
eaten
by footsteps, the cursive of animals and humans
echoing
the valleys, streams, and summits beyond
brought back voices.
In the beginning was the field.
To move out I had to gather.
I had to cull
the things.
The things, the animals, the things, the things.
iii.
— What do you carry on you when you leave?
— My dark. My own piece of dark.
— What do you carry when you leave?
— The markings on the body.
— What do you carry when you leave?
— My spell:
Forgot –tenacts –forgot –tenwords
fragme –ntsof –theform –erlife
tokeep –ascharm –tokeep –asnew –redcru –cifix.
iv.
— To move on I had to cull
the things, the fragments
my children
left behind
before leaving me to begin their own lives
v.
— Kiatra kraapa omlou nou kriapa
(A stone breaks, a man does not break.)
vi.
— Still
the fragments are glass
pressed deep under skin
traveling in the flesh
choosing their own paths,
one ascends to the heart,
another pierces your abdomen.
— What does God cast down that the earth does not swallow?
— Wound through and through.
I spit it from my mouth like a bitter seed
but not a single teardrop touched my cheek,
why I had for years now
clenched my teeth.
— You cannot eat a stone, mother says
instead of
you cannot escape your fate.
— In order to leave
I had to cull the things.
That agony lasted months.
An entire winter.
Heavy and dark, stripping layer by layer
the vessels of memory.
But what hurt most
was what had, for so long, slipped
between my fingers like air.
What had been forgotten.
The missing.
What had not happened.
— Λεῦσσε δ’ ὅμως ἀπεόντα νόῳ παρεόντα βεβαίως
Parmenides says:
but see with your mind those who are missing, as if
they were present.
'In the beginning was the grazing
the pasture, sections of earth gathered extended
suffused from rain and the elements
eaten
by footsteps, the cursive of animals and humans
echoing'
Phoebe Giannisi, tr Brian Sneeden
modernpoetryintranslation.com/poem/transhu...
04.12.2025 11:02
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·
‘My name is Odysseas’ he said
but no one ever gives their real name.
‘You’re handsome’ he said.
He seemed like a well-brought-up boy.
When he undressed, his body was unexpectedly beautiful –
it didn’t resemble a porn model’s photograph
not stacked, perfumed, ready.
He wore a pair of nondescript briefs
and gave off a faint trace of sweat.
‘How nice, Odysseas—or whatever your name is’ I told him
‘you could be real, a real human
someone could hold or fall in love with you
one could imagine you writing poems —
how difficult these hookups would be then
how rare and how colourless.’
‘You guessed right, I write poems too’ he replied
‘but my name really is Odysseas
and I do really want you.
Don’t leave, don’t leave me please
I want so much to fall in love.’
‘My name is Odysseas’ he said
but no one ever gives their real name.
‘You’re handsome’ he said.
He seemed like a well-brought-up boy.
'Names'
George Le Nonce, translated from Greek by Kostya Tsolakis
modernpoetryintranslation.com/poem/names/
03.12.2025 09:39
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Out now!
MPT The Antidote to Agony: Focus on the Poetry of Greece and Cyprus, guest edited by Jessica Sequeira, features 30 selections of poems translated into English by contemporary poets, expanding the linguistic boundaries of Modern Greek, Bulgarian and Arvanitika, and more.
02.12.2025 15:19
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Brilliant to get @mptmagazine.bsky.social’s latest issue focusing on the poetry of Greece and Cyprus. Since its foundation in the mid-1960s by Ted Hughes & Daniel Weissbort, MPT has been hugely important in bringing Greek poetic voices to an English-speaking readership. Great that this continues.
01.12.2025 18:02
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