Poetry Bingo by Maria Taylor
-Reviewed by Harry Giles– Poetry Bingo is, most obviously, a game. Each of Maria Taylor’s four cards features a
Read more-Reviewed by Harry Giles– Poetry Bingo is, most obviously, a game. Each of Maria Taylor’s four cards features a
Read more-Reviewed by Angela Topping– The Last Walking Stick Factory is Hale’s first pamphlet of poems, yet there is a feeling
Read more-Reviewed by Judi Sutherland- Tom Vaughan is not this poet’s real name, but a pseudonym necessitated by his job in
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– As the title of Theresa Muñoz’s chapbook suggests, these are poems that have ‘been felt’ as
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– Richie McCaffery’s Happenstance Press pamphlet, Spinning Plates, is a collection of layers, interweaving birth and death,
Read more-Assembled by Claire Trevien– Pamphlets make the perfect Christmas present or stocking filler. For one, they’re usually gorgeously produced objects,
Read more-Reviewed by Chris Emslie– The poems in this pamphlet are presented in the style of a gallery of paintings. From
Read more-Reviewed by Chris Emslie– Kirsten Irving’s What To Do is deceptively titled. The poems in this pamphlet present a series of speakers, each
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– Gill Andrews delivers a lightness of touch in her chapbook, The Thief, which opens with a
Read more-Reviewed by Julia Bird– It rains heavily in Frances Corkey Thompson’s Long Acre. ‘Rain blew in’ in ‘The Beeches at Pickwell’, ‘it’s
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