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 Richard T. Watson– The title of Tania Hershman’s third collection comes from one of the stories inside –
Read more– Reviewed by Deirdre Hines – The questions implied by Teaching A Bird To Sing are metaphoric. In all good metaphors we are
Read more– Reviewed by Deirdre Hines – The hallucinogenic poems of This Night’s Forest re-imagine and re-represent the stories that underpin our culture.
Read more– Reviewed by Deirdre Hines – The spirit of Mallarmé hovers over the lines of the thirteen poems which comprise
Read more– Reviewed by Deirdre Hines – The opening poem of Millicent Borges Accardi’s Only More So, ‘On a Theme by William Stafford’, signposts the
Read more-In Conversation with Claire Trévien– I was lucky enough to attend and review the second New Orleans Poetry Festival last
Read more– Reviewed by Penny Boxall – Mark Pajak’s debut pamphlet, Spitting Distance, is somewhat like the Tardis. The assemblage of 19 poems
Read more-Reviewed by Jennifer Edgecombe- As an object, The Island, published by Wayleave, makes you feel as if you are embarking
Read morereviewed by Stella Backhouse Are We Where We Are? is a series of nine performance pieces to be premièred
Read more-By Terry Melia- We Could’ve Been Happy Here is a collection of twelve bittersweet stories, all set in contemporary Midwest
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