‘I Sing of Bricks’ by Angela Topping & ‘Erec & Enide’ by Amy De’ath
-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– These two poets inhabit entirely different worlds, not just because they come from different generations, but in
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– These two poets inhabit entirely different worlds, not just because they come from different generations, but in
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trevien– Roy Marvin and Eve Bishop, the authors of No, Robot, No! are in fact, as you
Read more-reviewed by Alex Campbell- “Client danger to self, others. Client already sees self as ‘author’. Having book out only exacerbates
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– Poetry is a matter of personal taste, of course. This pamphlet, McGonigal’s third, appeals to me because
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– Gill Andrews delivers a lightness of touch in her chapbook, The Thief, which opens with a
Read more-Reviewed by Rose Davies- The Night of the Day by David Morley is a pamphlet of poems which traverse the
Read more-Reviewed by Alex Campbell- It’s always hard, as a Westerner, reviewing a collection of poetry centred around the war in
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trevien– Blackheath Books is an independent artisan publisher specializing in the making of original books and pamphlets. Hand-letterpressed
Read more-Reviewed by Julia Bird– It rains heavily in Frances Corkey Thompson’s Long Acre. ‘Rain blew in’ in ‘The Beeches at Pickwell’, ‘it’s
Read more-Reviewed by Alex Campbell- Poetry is not visual art. They certainly share many properties, but the bare presentation of a
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