‘Loose Ends’ by Bernadette Cremin
-Reviewed by Strat Mastoris– If they gave awards for books with misleading titles, Bernadette Cremin’s Loose Ends would be up there
Read more-Reviewed by Strat Mastoris– If they gave awards for books with misleading titles, Bernadette Cremin’s Loose Ends would be up there
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– The title and the first poem of this chapbook get you right in the mood for
Read more-Reviewed by Judi Sutherland– Form – Carl Potter There are flashes of real originality in Form, a new pamphlet from
Read more–Reviewed by Andrew Bailey– I bet it’s not just me that can’t read the opening of ‘Kubla Khan’ without hearing
Read more-Reviewed by Judi Sutherland– The poems in John Wedgwood Clarke’s pamphlet, Sea Swim, are brief and bracing, like a dip
Read more-Reviewed by Judi Sutherland– Víctor Terán is a Mexican poet who writes in his native Zapotec, a minority language of
Read more-Reviewed by Charles Whalley– Mass Graves: City of Now is a pamphlet about guilt, depravity, fear, madness, desire, unease, meaning,
Read more-Reviewed by Suzannah Evans– Corrupt Press is a Paris-based press run by Dylan Harris, who is particularly interested in publishing
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– Elizabeth-Jane Burnett is a performance poet, and there is something of the immediacy of the spoken word
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– In this chapbook, the reader is challenged to work out Meredith Andrea’s ‘means of reasoning, system
Read more