What the Ground Holds by Rosie Jackson
-Reviewed by Ruth Stacey– It’s interesting that Rosie Jackson’s What the Ground Holds begins with the constricting feeling of being
Read more-Reviewed by Ruth Stacey– It’s interesting that Rosie Jackson’s What the Ground Holds begins with the constricting feeling of being
Read more-Reviewed by Nicole Rollender– Danielle Susi’s 12-poem chapbook, The Month In Which We Are Born, pays careful attention to the
Read more-Reviewed by Owen Vince– Properly, the subject of Gabriel Moreno’s Nights in Mesogeois is song and the voice that sings.
Read more-Reviewed by Steve Nash– Jessica Piazza’s chapbook This is Not a Sky is a collection of ekphrastic works with each
Read more-Reviewed by Kiran Millwood-Hargrave– Foxes proliferate and fascinate throughout literature, from Reynard and kitsunetsuki, to Sarah Hall’s Mrs Fox. Their
Read more-Reviewed by Jessica Traynor– In Entomology, Helen Clare uses a sonnet sequence on insects as a lens through which to
Read more-Reviewed by Fiona Sinclair– The title and acknowledgements to this collection suggest a sequence of poems following the treatment and
Read more-Reviewed by Wynn Wheldon– I thought I was going to have trouble with this, what with the first poem being
Read more-Reviewed by Alice Allen- Jaccqueline Saphra’s sequence of prose poems opens with the startling statement: When I was a child
Read more-Reviewed by Bethany W. Pope– Mythology always provides a rich seam for writers to draw from, especially when they uncover
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