Say by Sarala Estruch
-Reviewed by Emma Lee- Through the poems in Say, Sarala Estruch explores subjects such as losing a father as a
-Reviewed by Fiona Moore– Some of the poems in Bike, Rain start ordinary and turn strange. A few are surreal
Read more-Reviewed by Caroline M. Davies– People have been writing about mermaids for centuries but Lines Underwater is an anthology which
Read more-Reviewed by Jenna Clake– What is most striking about Stewart’s Toebirds and Woodlice is its difference to her other pamphlet,
Read more-Reviewed by Jenna Clake– Metamorphosis of Woman/ Realms of Man is written by husband and wife Joseph Robert and
Read more-Reviewed by Lettie Mckie– ‘A selection of Britain’s best contemporary poets united against green belt development’ Traditionally poetry and political
Read more-Reviewed by Richard T. Watson– Everything I’ve heard about the Holocaust leads me think that Auschwitz was the worst –
Read more-Reviewed by Dan Holloway– Livid Among the Ghostings, Anna Percy’s first substantial pamphlet (published by Flapjack Press) has the best
Read more-Reviewed by Paul McMenemy– As Robert Vas Dias points out, many Korean poets treat the conventions of sijo form selectively; working
Read more– reviewed by Lucy Ayrton – (Lucy is one of the intrepid Sabotage reviewers covering the Edinburgh Fringe this year,
Read more-Reviewed by Richard T. Watson– Few of us can remember our childhoods vividly and clearly, every memory of every day
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