Antiphonal Fugue for Marx Brothers, Elephant, and Slide Trombone by Rachel Trousdale
– Reviewed by Grant Tarbard – Rachel Trousdale is an assistant professor of English at Framingham State University, the author of
Read more– Reviewed by Grant Tarbard – Rachel Trousdale is an assistant professor of English at Framingham State University, the author of
Read more– 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 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 Jenna Clake – The theme for Paper & Ink’s seventh issue is ‘hangovers’, which (perhaps inevitably) results
Read more– Reviewed by Fiona Moore – Pots, bowls, jars, jugs: the poems in Clay take vessels as a starting point,
Read more– Reviewed by Penny Boxall – In Gemma June Howell’s Rock Life: 17 Poems from the Welsh Valleys, we’re immediately surrounded
Read more– Reviewed by Alice Tarbuck – Colloquially, works we enjoy ‘stay with us’ – but not in their original, neat, lineated
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