Say by Sarala Estruch
-Reviewed by Emma Lee- Through the poems in Say, Sarala Estruch explores subjects such as losing a father as a
It’s with a heavy heart at Sabotage Reviews that after eighteen months of content creating across our social media platforms,
Read more-Reviewed by Deirdre Hines- Cassandra J. Bruner is a transfeminine poet, whose chapbook ‘The Wishbone Dress’ is the 2019 recipient
Read more-Reviewed by Vic Pickup- Karen Lloyd mesmerises with her translation of detailed observations into striking descriptive poetry. In ‘Robin’, she
Read more-Reviewed by Helen Calcutt- ‘Confused, wet through, My hands, torn reaching to embrace mountains’ This is the opening of the title
Read more-Reviewed by Emma Lee- This Lexia & Other Languages starts by exploring dyslexia through a mother’s perspective of a dyslexic
Read more-Reviewed by Marie Isabel Matthews-Schlinzig- How does one start a conversation about what it means to be chronically ill, to
Read more—Reviewed by Sam Edwards— What Are You Like (Postbox Press) is a collection of short stories from author Shelley Day.
Read more—Reviewed by Sally Shaw— It’s Gone Dark Over Bill’s Mother’s (Myriad Editions, 2019) is a collection of twenty short stories
Read more—Reviewed by Sam Edwards— In her debut collection Paris Syndrome (Banshee Press), author Lucy Sweeny Byrne pierces the glamour bubble
Read more—Reviewed by Mikiko Fukuda— Transnationalism and tourism have allowed people greater freedom of movement—both to travel and emigrate. Elleke Boehmer
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