Rosa Fernandez is a spoken word artist, musician and and
two-time Word! Slam winner who has performed at venues and festivals across the
UK and been published in the UK (various anthologies, Bite Me pamphlet
by Bookishly) and Canada (Untethered magazine). With a degree from Goldsmiths
College in English Literature, followed by a few years of nearly being famous
as a pop star, Rosa has at least fifteen years of experience in editing,
proofreading and publishing every kind of art form,
running a blog of reviews of films, Netflix series, art exhibitions and poetry
collections.
Rosa has performed in various guises at numerous venues
nationwide, from singing songs from films in a burlesque showcase to writing
and performing monologues, from headlining festivals and starring in a music
video to performing stand up and hosting poetry nights dressed in ridiculous
costumes; she brings her unique perspective, gentle whimsy and firm sense of
socialist feminist justice to every performance. Otherwise, she can often be
found wearing a hat and thinking about biscuits. Her poems have toured the
nation in the back of a transit van, and it sometimes sounds like it.
Rosa’s upcoming poetry performances include co-hosting RunYour Tongue at the Exchange on Wednesday 23 November, a feature performance at
Word! Slam at the Attenborough Arts Centre on Thursday 24 November and a
feature performance at a fundraising event for Save Weekley Hall Wood on Friday
25 November at Kettering Arts Centre. Rosa will also be performing poetry and
songs at the Clarendon Park Christmas Fair on Queen’s Road on Sunday 4
December, and would be delighted to see you at any of these events,
particularly if you want to buy her pamphlet or haiku zines as excellent
Christmas gifts!
About Bite Me, by Rosa Fernandez
Food is so much more than just fuel; it is opinion, memory,
trigger, treat, and is at times just funny all by itself.
In this tasty selection box, Rosa Fernandez celebrates all
the things we might consume and why, whether toast will actually kill you, and
why the kitchen is the best place in the house. Crumbs!
From Bite Me
You piled them all up
Into the imaginary;
You needed somewhere
Where they could disappear.
The words are dusty,
Fading, crumbling;
I put one in my mouth
Occasionally, for fun.
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