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 James O’Leary – The week before I received a review copy of I Am Where, I saw
Read more– Reviewed by Emma Lee – Blinking in the Light is a pamphlet of twenty-one poems on a series of cumulative tragedies,
Read more– Reviewed by Humphrey Astley – Everyone likes a good backstory, especially if it informs or enriches one’s understanding of
Read more– reviewed by Dan Holloway – A rich literary town… In Oxford, we are very spoiled for spoken word of
Read more– reviewed by Betsy Porritt – Spoken Word London – a truly diverse evening… There’s something exciting about the nights
Read more– Reviewed by Angelina D’Roza – The girl and her eggplant would not be parted These are the opening lines of
Read more– Reviewed by Becky Varley–Winter – Straight Away the Emptied World is ostensibly a dystopian-themed chapbook, but as Leah Umansky tells
Read more-Reviewed by Balihar Khalsa– I work in TV and am trying to establish myself as a documentary maker, but
Read more-Reviewed by Charlotte Barnes– Carole Burns’s recently published collection, The Missing Woman and Other Stories, is a bite-size collection of
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien– Akwe Amosu’s debut collection Not Goodbye is littered with false and real endings. Amosu is a
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