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 Grant Tarbard – Christopher Mulrooney was a man of many talents: a photographer, translator, playwright and editor of
Read more– Reviewed by Bethany W. Pope – Niall Griffiths’ Red Roar is a vast, polluted river of a book which
Read more– Reviewed by Emma Lee – Zygote Poems follows the journey through pregnancy, birth and the child’s first year from a father’s
Read more– Reviewed by JPL – Read this for the music of words: Chalk cliffs are wax-white and gull-white sluiced and soiled
Read more– Reviewed by Alice Merry – Best Man is a tough and beautiful reflection on the troubled life and death
Read more-Reviewed by Sarah Gonnet– 101 Detectives is a collection of short stories far from the formulaic state of most mystery
Read more– Reviewed by Bethany W Pope – Oliver Langmead’s Dark Star combines many seemingly disparate elements into one beautiful and entertaining story.
Read more-Reviewed by Eleanor Hemsley– Fishermen’s Tales tells the story of the plague in Northern England, as a small village fights
Read more– Reviewed by Elanor Clarke – The Running of the Tyrannosaurs, a stand-alone story, not quite a novella but a
Read more-Reviewed by Bridey Heing– In her latest independently published fantasy tale, Angelika Rust brings about the apocalypse. In the story,
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