Advice for an Only Child by Anja Konig
-Reviewed by Judi Sutherland– Anja Konig, who was ‘raised in the German language but now writes in English’, opens her
Read more-Reviewed by Judi Sutherland– Anja Konig, who was ‘raised in the German language but now writes in English’, opens her
Read more-Reviewed by Anna Percy– The themes of this pamphlet are depicted on the cover in images: black space and an ape
Read more-Reviewed by Sally Jack- It seems fitting somehow that WORD!, the Midlands’ longest running spoken word night – now in
Read more-Reviewed by Zara Raab– Origins and lineage––familial, etymological and literary––are Zaffar Kunial’s subject in his Faber New Poets selection, which
Read more-Reviewed by Ruth Stacey– It’s interesting that Rosie Jackson’s What the Ground Holds begins with the constricting feeling of being
Read more-Reviewed by Nicole Rollender– Danielle Susi’s 12-poem chapbook, The Month In Which We Are Born, pays careful attention to the
Read more-Reviewed by Owen Vince– Properly, the subject of Gabriel Moreno’s Nights in Mesogeois is song and the voice that sings.
Read more-Reviewed by Steve Nash– Jessica Piazza’s chapbook This is Not a Sky is a collection of ekphrastic works with each
Read more-Reviewed by Kiran Millwood-Hargrave– Foxes proliferate and fascinate throughout literature, from Reynard and kitsunetsuki, to Sarah Hall’s Mrs Fox. Their
Read more-Reviewed by Bethany W. Pope– Bobby Parker’s Blue Movie is a beautifully intense study of the brutality of love executed
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