Menos's first pamphlet,
Extra Maths, selected by
Gerard Benson, was a winner in
The Poetry Business Book & Pamphlet Competition 2004, and her second pamphlet,
Wheelbarrow Farm, was a winner in the Templar Poetry Pamphlet and Collection Competition 2010. She was included in
Oxford Poets 2007: An Anthology, edited by
David Constantine and
Bernard O'Donoghue, published by
Carcanet Press. Her first collection,
Berg (
Seren, 2009), which has "poems about icebergs floating down the
Thames and aliens wading in the
Hudson River" won the
Forward Prize for Best First Collection 2010. This, she won alongside
Seamus Heaney, who was awarded the Forward Prize for Best Collection for his collection
Human Chain (
Faber, 2010). She was included in the Forward Book of Poetry 2011 as a "glittering debutant", and her second collection,
Red Devon, was published by Seren in June 2013. In August 2016, Hilary, Andy and, their youngest son, Inigo moved to
France to renovate a fifteenth century Templar lodge in the Tarn and develop their web design company, Magic Bean. In 2018/19, she was a winner in The Poetry Business Book & Pamphlet Competition for the second time with her pamphlet,
Human Tissue, which was selected by the judges
Neil Astley,
Michael Schmidt, and Amy Wack.
Jonathan Edwards called
Human Tissue's central theme a "powerful tale of a son’s kidney transplant". She is one of the few writers to have won The Poetry Business Competition twice. In 2021, they set up The Friday Poem. As a reviewer, she has written for Sphinx Review,
PN Review and Warwick Review, among others. Menos's newest pamphlet is
Fear of Forks, published by HappenStance Press in 2022. In a review, her writing in
Fear of Forks has been praised for her "linguistic precision", noting the pamphlet as "convincing and satisfying. A proper meal with proper cutlery – one that lingers on the memory’s palate." In 2024, Menos selected poems for and introduced the Candlestick Press anthology
Ten Poems about Cows. ==Bibliography==