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 Anthony Costello – Hyam Plutzik‘s Letter from a Young Poet should not be confused with Rilke’s Letters
Read more– Reviewed by James O’Leary – From what information I could find (or not find) on Smallminded Books, they have
Read more– Reviewed by Bethany W. Pope – Darshana Suresh, the author of Howling at the Moon, is only nineteen years
Read more– Reviewed by Roisin Kelly – Victor Tapner has already had several poetry collections published, so Banquet in the Hall
Read more– Reviewed by Colin Herd – There’s more to Crispin Best’s Faber New Poets pamphlet than bagels and doughnuts, but they
Read more– Reviewed by Grant Tarbard – Kathy Pimlott grew up in Radford, Nottingham under the yellow-fingered dusk of the Player’s
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien– Terry Sanders’ 1987 documentary Slow Fires ‘looks at the disintegration of library holdings worldwide due to
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien– Matric Rage is Genna Gardini’s powerful and strange debut collection, published by the new South African
Read more-Reviewed by Sarah Gonnet– Karen Little writes characters with a surface oddness. Whether they are floridly psychotic or merely displaying
Read more-Reviewed by Richard T. Watson– Two of the short stories in Jan Carson’s collection Children’s Children serve as handy examples
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