Mario Petrucci

Poet, Spoken Word Artist

United Kingdom
GB

Author's Bio

Mario Petrucci is a multi-award-winning poet, freelance performer and academic, physicist, environmentalist, translator, educator and broadcaster, active with such radio outlets as Kaleidoscope, The Verb and the BBC World Service.  His work is as profoundly moving as it is thought-provoking, shifting convincingly between lyric, performance, science, ecology, war and cultural memory.  He is also one of the earliest founders and proponents of Ecopoetry in the UK (e.g. Bosco, 1999). 

Formally inventive, his poetry ranges from the intimate to the monumental, from scientific and medical precision to metaphysical reach.  His love poetry takes candour and metaphor to unprecedented heights, and depths, soaring — or plummeting — where few poets dare.  Numerous institutional engagements include historic, first-ever poet-in-residence placements at BBC Radio 3 and the Imperial War Museum, while his 2012 Olympic centrepiece commission Tales from the Bridge (a vast 3D soundscape spanning the Thames) was shortlisted for the Ted Hughes Award and heard by over 4 million people.   

22 national and international competition wins between 1991 and 2005 include the Bridport Prize, Irish Times Perpetual Trophy, and London Writers Competition (four times).  Heavy Water: a poem for Chernobyl, winner of the Arvon Prize, was praised by The Daily Telegraph as “heartfelt, ambitious and alive”, and singled out by Verse (USA) as “poetry on a geological scale… a new track for poets of witness”.  It fuelled two award-winning films, spurring a wide-reaching reassessment of the value of poetry in trauma and ethical discourse.  

Among Petrucci's publishers are Bloodaxe, Enitharmon, Arc, Nine Arches and Cinnamon, with titles that include the PBS Recommendation Shrapnel and Sheets (1996) and Flowers of Sulphur (2007).  His epic 1111-poem sequence i tulips (2010) uniquely revivifies Anglo-American modernism, the Poetry Book Society recognising “a truly ambitious landmark body of work”.  As translator, Petrucci has brought into English universally applauded versions of Hafez, Rumi, Montale, Sappho, Catullus, and the Isha Upanishad, with Xenia (2016) receiving a PEN Translates Award and a shortlisting for the John Florio Prize.

A cross-disciplinary specialist who inventively combines poetry with science and the environment, both theoretically and in his poetry, Petrucci featured at the World Conference on Science and Art for Sustainability (Belgrade, 2025), flagship event of the United Nations’ Decade of Sciences for Sustainable Development.  Founder of Writing Into Freedom, a Youtube channel and its sibling website offering free writing resources for all, he has developed groundbreaking frameworks for creative practice that couch a lively, liberating pedagogy within grassroots access and academic rigour.  

Now widely recognised as among the most persistent and successful literary innovators of his generation, Petrucci's British Council appraisal is preserved in the UK Government Web Archive, and in 2023 his entire literary archive was acquired by the British Library.  In 2025, the UK's renowned Poetry Archive secured and made public a substantial holding of his audio work.

Publications & Prizes

Poetry

Books:
Moonbird : love poems (Fair Acre Press, 2023)
,
afterlove (Cinnamon Press, 2020)
,
Beloved: 81 poems from Hafez (translation) (Bloodaxe Books, 2018)
,
Xenia (translation of Eugenio Montale) (Arc Publications, 2016)
,
crib (Enitharmon Press, 2014)
,
anima (Nine Arches Press, 2013)
,
i tulips (Enitharmon Press, 2010)
,
Nights * Sifnos * Hands (Flarestack Publishing U.K., 2010)
,
Flowers of Sulphur (Enitharmon Press, 2007)
,
Heavy Water: a poem for Chernobyl (Enitharmon Press, 2004)
,
Bosco (Hearing Eye, 1999)
,
Shrapnel and Sheets (Headland Publications, 1996)

Spoken Word

Performances:
Pivotal: Poetry & the Environment (2015)
,
Tales from the Bridge (2012)
,
Poets & Players (2011)
,
BBC Radio 3 poet in residence (2004)
,
ShadoWork (2000)
,
Imperial War Museum poet in residence (1999)
Prizes won: 
  • 1993 Winner, London Writers Competition
  • 1995 Edith Kitt Memorial Award
  • 1996 Poetry Book Society Recommendation
  • 1996 Edith Kitt Memorial Award
  • 1997 Winner, Sheffield Thursday Prize
  • 1997 Winner, inaugural Irish Times Perpetual Trophy
  • 1998 New London Writers Award (London Arts)
  • 1998 Winner, London Writers Competition
  • 1998 Winner, Sheffield Thursday Prize
  • 1999 Bridport Poetry Prize
  • 2002 Daily Telegraph / Arvon International Poetry Prize
  • 2002 Arts Council England Writers' Award
  • 2003 Essex Book Awards Best Fiction Prize 2000–2002
  • 2003 Silver Wyvern Award
  • 2004 Winner, London Writers Competition
  • 2004 National Poetry Competition: third prize cum laude
  • 2005/2006 Arts Council England Grants for the ArtsScience in Poetry
  • 2005 Winner, London Writers Competition
  • 2007 Cinequest Film Festival Award, Best Short Documentary (Half Life: a Journey to Chernobyl)
  • 2009/10 Arts Council England Grants for the Artsi tulips
  • 2012 Shortlisted for The Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry: Tales from the Bridge
  • 2016 Winner, PEN Translates Award
  • 2018 Shortlisted: John Florio Prize for Italian Translation (with Xenia by Eugenio Montale)

Personal Favorites

Favorite authors: 
Rilke, Emily Dickinson, the Sufi poets, Marquez... so many and so few. Anyone with craft and heart. Anyone who is awake.
What I'm reading now: 
whatever I can find! by e.e. cummings

More Information

Gives readings: 
Yes
Travels for readings: 
Yes
Identifies as: 
Other
Prefers to work with: 
Any
Fluent in: 
English
Born in: 
London
United Kingdom
Raised in: 
Enfield
United Kingdom
Please note: All information in the Directory is provided by the listed writers or their representatives.
Last update: Jul 17, 2025