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Jay Hulme

    Jay Hulme est un poète performeur, conférencier et éducateur transgenre primé. Il enseigne, conseille, donne des conférences et travaille sur l'importance de la diversité dans les médias, en mettant l'accent sur l'inclusion et les droits des personnes transgenres. Hulme présente sa poésie lors d'événements au Royaume-Uni et a été publié dans de nombreuses revues et journaux. Son travail explore souvent les thèmes de l'identité et de la représentation, offrant aux lecteurs une perspective unique sur les questions sociales contemporaines.

    The Practice Of Garment Pattern Making. W. H. Hulme
    Clouds Cannot Cover Us
    Farmer Arnold's Barnyard Book Two
    The Heavenfield
    My Own Way
    The Backwater Sermons
    • The Backwater Sermons

      • 94pages
      • 4 heures de lecture
      4,6(363)Évaluer

      Jay Hulme is an award-winning transgender poet, performer, educator and speaker. In this new poetry collection, Jay details his journey through faith and baptism during an unprecedented world-wide pandemic. Jay's poetry explores belief in the modern world and offers a fresh and unique perspective on queer faith.

      The Backwater Sermons
    • My Own Way

      • 48pages
      • 2 heures de lecture
      4,7(3)Évaluer

      My Own Way is a poem and a picture book that introduces very young children to the wonder of gender diversity. Why feel limited to his or hers, blue or pink, football or ballet?

      My Own Way
    • Hailed as a 'Modern-day Classic of Science-Fiction', the Heavenfield is a dark science-fiction thriller set within a British experimental research facility, involving clandestine Government Agencies, Supernatural Forces, and Alternate Realities. When Grace Palmer and her team discover a way into a mysterious world they name the 'Heavenfield', they trigger a devastating chain of events. Bizarre, unexplained murders and attacks on the Project leave scientists trapped in the Field with no way to return. As their air supplies run low and their equipment starts to fail, their nightmares begin to play out before them...

      The Heavenfield
    • Do animals like to have their picture taken? How do chickens learn to scratch in the dirt for worms? Do pigs like music? What about turkeys? Where do kittens like to sleep? Do pigs like to take a bath? To find out, join the animal friends in Farmer Arnold's barnyard. They all look out for each other and have lots of fun. Sometimes they have work to do, but they also have time to play and even have a few adventures. There's never a dull moment on Farmer Arnold's farm! Farmer Arnold's Barnyard Book Two is filled with twenty-four short stories that will help young readers learn about farm life, along with some important lessons about safety, manners, and being kind to others. Perfect as a read-aloud book or a book for early readers, this delightful collection will both educate and entertain....

      Farmer Arnold's Barnyard Book Two
    • This is Jay Hulme's first published collection of poetry. It showcases his unique voice and form of expression. The poems have been carefully selected to chart Jay's journey from growing up in a working-class family in Leicestershire to his feelings and thoughts about school life and his experience as a transgender teenager. As Jay says himself: When it was decided that this collection would be for teenagers I was left with this determination, that this collection wouldn't speak down to anyone, that the world I portrayed within it would be the world we live in, that there would be no attempt to make reality 'appropriate for children'. People seem to forget that teenagers live in the same world as everyone else, and they face the same struggles adults face every day. Teenagers deal with racism and sexism and disability and poverty and so much more that we don't even see. The things that are traditionally seen as inappropriate for young people to see, are so often the same things they experience day to day.

      Clouds Cannot Cover Us
    • A sea-born creature, who never quite belongs, discovers who she really is in this powerful, illustrated song about metamorphosis and finding your true home.

      Here Be Monsters
    • In The Vanishing Song, trans Christian poet Jay Hulme goes in search of what is all but lost in contemporary faith, the 'beautiful and holy and wild' way of the saints, and the alluring, perplexing mystery of the places they chose for themselves - forests, caves, rocky outcrops in the sea.

      The Vanishing Song