The Island by Chris Considine
-Reviewed by Jennifer Edgecombe- As an object, The Island, published by Wayleave, makes you feel as if you are embarking
Read more-Reviewed by Jennifer Edgecombe- As an object, The Island, published by Wayleave, makes you feel as if you are embarking
Read more-Reviewed by Bethany W. Pope– Nathan Evans and Justin David’s Threads is a collaborative work which cleverly combines a wide
Read more–Reviewed by Charlie Baylis– Catherine Graham is a ‘proudly working class’ poet from Newcastle upon Tyne. Her pamphlet Like A Fish
Read more-Reviewed by Jenna Clake- La Errante, a new multi-lingual zine of poetry and illustration, unfolds like album artwork to reveal
Read more–Reviewed by Pam Thompson– The title of Emma Simon’s collection is a word borrowed from one of Mark Antony’s speeches
Read more–Reviewed by Bethany W. Pope– Every so often life brims over with terror. Your mother dies from an aneurysm, falling
Read more-Reviewed by Rachel Stirling- Fragile Houses, Nina Lewis’ debut pamphlet from V. Press, explores the subject of memory. She describes
Read more-Reviewed by Helen Calcutt– One word springs to mind when reading Knight’s first pamphlet All the footprints I left were red
Read more–Reviewed by Alice Tarbuck– Periplous is a fascinating and unusual pamphlet, in that it imaginatively recreates the journey of Greek merchant-explorer
Read more-Reviewed by Alice Tarbuck– In ‘The Next Room’, toward the end of Kate Wakeling’s debut pamphlet, there is a
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