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 Alice Tarbuck – Ransom Notes is Jacqui Rowe’s fourth pamphlet, and focuses on the fraught relationship between constructing text
Read more– Reviewed by Alice Tarbuck – Jenny Lindsay is a performance poet and Slam Champion who was an extremely active
Read more– Reviewed by Alice Tarbuck – Do Not Alight Here Again is poet, performer and promoter Rachel McCrum’s second pamphlet,
Read more– Reviewed by Anja Konig – The sun is a playful star in Simon Barraclough’s Sunspots, his third full collection:
Read more– Reviewed by Andie Berryman – The Blood House is the debut pamphlet from Bristol-based poet Sarer Scotthorne. The cover
Read more– Reviewed by Alice Allen – A pleasingly bound and hand-stitched chapbook of thirty poems, The Goodbye Animals won Katherine Soniat the
Read more– Reviewed by David Clarke – White Whale is Irish poet Victoria Kennefick’s first chapbook, winner of the Fool for
Read more– Reviewed by Hayden Westfield Bell – Translated literature has a hard time finding an audience in the contemporary publishing
Read more– Reviewed by Bethany W. Pope – Robert Peake’s The Knowledge (Nine Arches Press) is a subtle, tender collection whose
Read more– Reviewed by Becky Varley–Winter – Claire Cronin‘s Therese is one poem in fifteen parts on the life of Saint Therese of
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