The Contradictions of Flesh by Sonia Hendy-Isaac
-Reviewed by C.A. LaRue– If Sonia Hendy-Isaac’s “soul is a dark forest,” as Anton Chekhov says, she explores the bounds
Read more-Reviewed by C.A. LaRue– If Sonia Hendy-Isaac’s “soul is a dark forest,” as Anton Chekhov says, she explores the bounds
Read more-Reviewed by Richie McCaffery– Sometimes poetry collections are a brief flirtation, a dalliance which lights up the afternoon it takes
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien– A wonderful line in Susanne Ehrhardt’s biography states that ‘she had been living with the English
Read more-Reviewed by David Clarke– John Freeman has been publishing poetry books with small presses since the mid-1970s, and reviews in
Read more-Reviewed by David Clarke– The Russian critic Mikhail Bakhtin once argued that the distinguishing feature of the novel was
Read more-Reviewed by Billy Mills– ‘Anything you can write is already somehow immanent in the language, a baffling fact that has
Read more-Reviewed by Charles Whalley– “I’m a poet and I feel that the internet — comprised completely of text-based alphanumeric language
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