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 Rosie Breese– Angus Sinclair is a modern-day Renaissance man. Not content with being a gifted poet and photo-artist,
Read more-Reviewed by Alex MacDonald– When President of the European Union, and former President of Belgium, Herman Van Rompuy, announced
Read more-Reviewed by James Webster– Farrago The last time I went to Farrago I was unimpressed. For an event with such a
Read more-Reviewed by Ian Farnell- I know it’s a translation, but I’m not sure about the title. Vredens Tid is the
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trevien– On one of my last days in Paris, I stumbled across what I’d been looking for
Read more-Reviewed by James Webster It turns out Claire Trévien, Sabotage’s Poetry Editor, is a bit of a poet herself. I attended
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– Mytton…Dyer…Sweet Billy Gibson by Deborah Tyler-Bennett focuses on character portraits of three eccentrics from the eighteenth to the
Read more-Reviewed by Mark Burnhope– If reading McCready’s debut pamphlet puts me in mind of two or three poets in particular,
Read more-Reviewed by Ian Chung– In Jack R. Johnson’s An Animal’s Guide to Earthly Salvation, protagonist Jeffrey Rawlings is an assistant
Read more-Reviewed by Richard T. Watson– Peirene Press has been producing a series of short story collections called The Man, which
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