Say by Sarala Estruch
-Reviewed by Emma Lee- Through the poems in Say, Sarala Estruch explores subjects such as losing a father as a
-Reviewed by Dipika Mummery- It may no longer dominate the headlines, but the refugee crisis is still very much real
Read more-Reviewed by Neil Campbell- In any book I read to review, I need to be won over by the writer,
Read more-Reviewed by Joshua Lambert- In his debut collection, The Writers’ Block (Black Pear Press), Michael Wheatley gives us a biopsy of
Read more-Reviewed by Cath Barton- New Zealand author Sandra Arnold is a prolific writer of flash fiction, with over 80 pieces
Read more-Reviewed by Rhys Knapman- You Will Grow Into Them is a single author collection of ten short horror stories by
Read more-Reviewed by Phoebe Walker- Longlisted for the Polari First Book Prize 2018, Toby Campion’s Through your blood is a powerful,
Read more-Reviewed by Alison Jones- The Princess of Vix immediately transports the reader into the world of a Celtic princess whose
Read more-Reviewed by Matthew Hacke- According to Critical Poetics Online, Zayneb Allak’s academic research “explores ways in which writing spiders into
Read more-Reviewed by Emma Lee- The title poem starts as an effective list of details that mark the differences between a
Read more– Reviewed by Dipika Mummery – Birgit Vanderbeke’s You Would Have Missed Me (Peirene Press), translated from the original German by
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