Homecoming by Carrie Etter
-Reviewed by Penny Boxall– Homecoming opens with a train wreck. The title poem is a deftly-handled slipping of language as
Read more-Reviewed by Penny Boxall– Homecoming opens with a train wreck. The title poem is a deftly-handled slipping of language as
Read more-Reviewed by David Clarke– This is a recording of a spontaneous, spoken review of Semblance (Dusie Press, 2013) by Chris Pusateri
Read more-Reviewed by Richie McCaffery– It’s clear from the title of this collection and the Frederic Remington image on the front-cover
Read more-Reviewed by Billy Mills– The heart of Ireland is the great limestone lowland plain that stretches more or less all
Read more-Reviewed by Rosie Breese– As Andy Harrod’s website bio explains, he writes “not out of a desire to tell stories,
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– Jessamine O’Connor is a relatively recent name to appear in the Irish poetry world, and after winning
Read more-Reviewed by Hayden Westfield Bell– Poems of Yves Bonnefoy 2 translated by Ian Brinton and Michael Grant is the second
Read more-Reviewed by David Sheridan- ‘Only a moment ago she had been enjoying the twist of her spoon in the syrup
Read more-Reviewed by Rosie Breese– Jared Joseph’s collection Mammal begins with a wall of sound – a riotous rattling-off of terms
Read more-Reviewed by Hayden Westfield-Bell– Ian Brinton and Michael Grant team up to translate the poems of Yves Bonnefoy
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