Ship of the Line by Penny Boxall
-Reviewed by Richie McCaffery– Sometimes poetry collections are a brief flirtation, a dalliance which lights up the afternoon it takes
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 Fiona Moore– There’s a Buddhist epigraph to the last poem, ‘Noise’ which works well for all of this
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 Judi Sutherland- Tom Vaughan is not this poet’s real name, but a pseudonym necessitated by his job in
Read more-Reviewed by Billy Mills– In the early 1990s, Claremont Road in Leytonstone was the locus of one of the most
Read more-Reviewed by David Clarke– Richard O’Brien’s short pamphlet of 13 poems, The Emmores, takes its punning title from Ovid’s
Read more-Reviewed by Judi Sutherland– It takes a quirky kind of mind for a poet to decide, for National Poetry Writing
Read more-Reviewed by Keiran Goddard– First things first … Leah Umansky’s Mad Men inspired pamphlet, Don Dreams and I Dream, is
Read more-Reviewed by Caroline M. Davies– Annah Browning’s The Marriage is a chapbook of twenty poems dealing, as one might
Read more-Reviewed by Harry Giles– The Fruit Journal presents so completely as an academic journal – mid-seventies cover design and typography,
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