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 Ian Chung– What is particularly interesting about The Flood is how it translates the live storytelling experience into
Read more-Reviewed by Cameron Brady-Turner– It’s hard to know where to begin with Alliterati. Issue 10 was published free on Issuu
Read more-Reviewed by Laura Seymour– As David Morley writes in his introduction, this new anthology explores ‘the possibility of place and
Read more-Reviewed by Adrian Slatcher– For my English O Level, one of the creative writing options was to write a story based
Read more-Reviewed by Donald Gardner– Much of Then Spree, Nia Davies’s first pamphlet of poems, reads like a focussed, if somewhat
Read more-Reviewed by Ananya S Guha– The basic tenet of Estuary is a synecdoche for the arts, a confluence, convergence or
Read more-Reviewed by Anthony Adler– I want to like Body Voices, and I want to say nice things about it; I
Read more-Reviewed by Billy Mills– Close to Home is the debut poetry collection of playwright and youth justice worker Michael Crowley.
Read more-Reviewed by Richard T. Watson– In Luke Kennard’s debut novella, the Holophin is a tiny, incredibly-powerful, highly-personalised computer. While humanity
Read more-Reviewed by Joan Standwick- Binders full of women was originally a limited-edition chapbook edited by Sophie Mayer and Sarah Crewe created
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