The Bitters by Susie Campbell
– Reviewed by Angelina D‘Roza – Like those Electoral Commission Adverts “If you don’t do politics, there’s not much you do
Read more– Reviewed by Angelina D‘Roza – Like those Electoral Commission Adverts “If you don’t do politics, there’s not much you do
Read more– Reviewed by JPL – You dust the beauty of a death as yet unnamed irregular, reveal a new age of
Read more– Reviewed by JPL – sputtering for air beneath the surface of a dream [Beach Combing] This is how Sarah Fletcher’s first
Read more– Reviewed by Emma Lee – Caboodle carries the weight of six poets’ craft, experience and skill, but that weight
Read more– Reviewed by Emma Lee – Jessamine O’Connor uses the poems in A Skyful of Kites to express anger, particularly at
Read more– Reviewed by Steve Nash – Greg Freeman’s Trainspotters begins with a nostalgic tribute to a brother slightly at odds with
Read more– Reviewed by Stephen Payne – In Stephen Sexton’s Oils, full of imaginative, lyrical, layered poems, ‘Long Reach’ is the most layered
Read more– Reviewed by Jessica Traynor – ‘Dazzle ships’ were WWI ships camouflaged with bright trompe l’oeil patterns designed to bewilder
Read more– Reviewed by Becky Varley–Winter – The cover of A Piece of Information About His Invisibility is a plant with its roots showing, and
Read more– Reviewed by Becky Varley–Winter – Bethany Carlson‘s Diadem Me is published beautifully by MIEL press: the cover is an image of
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