Say by Sarala Estruch
-Reviewed by Emma Lee- Through the poems in Say, Sarala Estruch explores subjects such as losing a father as a
Anna Percy will be reading at Penning Perfumes in Manchester on 23rd February. .
Read more-Reviewed by Andrew Bailey– So it turns out one way to incline this reviewer positively to your book is to
Read more-Reviewed by Elinor Walpole- Described as ‘Twelve stories of obsession, loss and getting in a state’ Ashley Stokes’s The Syllabus
Read more-Reviewed by Éireann Lorsung– Cathleen Allyn Conway’s chapbook Static Cling begins with a quotation from The Mistress Manual about the presumed
Read more-Reviewed by Harry Giles– One of the things I appreciate most about web journals is their architectural nature: where
Read more-Reviewed by Éireann Lorsung– Roland Barthes, in The Pleasure of the Text (my version is the 1975 Miller translation), writes that
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey- I was interested in this chapbook, by a New Zealander, because of the potential of its
Read more-Decided by Richard T. Watson– ‘Tis the season to be making lists and round-ups of the previous year, so it’s
Read more-Reviewed by William Howell– Samantha Henderson’s collection of 21 poems, 12 of which have been previously published, presents what
Read more-Reviewed by Charlotte Barnes– Byker Books, in their own words, began their publishing mission with the aim of publishing and
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