The Wire-Headed Heathen by Inua Ellams, Review #17
-Reviewed by Claire Trévien- Inua Ellams is a playwright as well as a poet. Writing is writing, you’ll say, but
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien- Inua Ellams is a playwright as well as a poet. Writing is writing, you’ll say, but
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien– When I first decided I was going to embark on this review-a-thon, I said I’d prefer
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien- How to summarize Sophie Reynolds’ Theatreland? You could say the poems are snapshot reviews of plays
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien- First off, it’s worth mentioning that Helen Evans is a former glider pilot who edited the
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien- There’s something quite comforting about the Otley Word Feast Press’ pamphlet covers, they remind me of
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien- I first read Adam Horovitz’s Only the Flame Remains while on a mini-bus, surrounded by my
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien- I tested out the poetic Tripadvisor form of reviewing in a Poetry School workshop last year,
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien– Cynthia Marie Hoffman’s Her Human Costume feels a bit like watching a game of chess in
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien- Noshi Gillani is a poet from Pakistan who migrated to the USA. She writes in Urdu,
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien– I don’t think I’m saying anything surprising here, when I say that there are still some
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