ju ju baby by Caroline Carver
– Reviewed by Grant Tarbard – Caroline Carver’s poems are woven with fine threads, without pomp, but with vulnerability and tempestuous
Read more– Reviewed by Grant Tarbard – Caroline Carver’s poems are woven with fine threads, without pomp, but with vulnerability and tempestuous
Read more– Reviewed by John Mee – Declare is one of a trio of publications by Geraldine Clarkson in 2016. Its
Read more– Reviewed by Humphrey Astley – As this short collection’s title – Loneliness Is the Machine that Drives the World – suggests,
Read more– Reviewed by Matthew Hacke – Pen Reid’s Invalid is a sharp exposure of a family living with debilitating illness.
Read more-Reviewed by Alice Tarbuck– In ‘The Next Room’, toward the end of Kate Wakeling’s debut pamphlet, there is a
Read more– Reviewed by Deirdre Hines – There is a symbiosis between Arabella Currie’s The Divers as it is felt in the
Read more-Reviewed by Jessica Traynor– Knots and Branches showcases Stewart Carswell’s talent for keen observation of the natural world. The forest
Read more-Reviewed by Katy Lewis Hood – The scar in the title of Carrie Etter’s recent pamphlet is a mark ‘in the earth’,
Read more– Reviewed by Emma Lee – Nisha Bhakoo uses dream-like imagery, sometimes from literal dreams, sometimes to blur the distinction between dream
Read more– Reviewed by Charlie Baylis – To Have To Follow, a pamphlet of twenty four poems, is the result of a
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