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 Wynn Wheldon– I thought I was going to have trouble with this, what with the first poem being
Read more-Reviewed by Bethany W. Pope– Merie Kirby’s first collection, The Dog Runs On, is a fascinating discourse that centres around
Read more-Reviewed by Paul Goring- Anthony Costello’s The Mask is a skilled, demanding, ambitious, haunting and in many senses a very
Read more-Reviewed by Afric McGlinchey– ‘Make of my life a few wild stanzas.’ In the opening poem of this collection, a young
Read more-Reviewed by Cathy Dreyer– I wanted to like the Other Side of Sleep: Narrative Poems. I like the idea of
Read more-Reviewed by Claire Trévien– The section titles in Bin Ramke’s twelfth collection Missing the Moon are stories in themselves: ‘The
Read more-Reviewed by Cath Barton- Reading Commentary (A Tale), described by the publisher as ‘a narrative hovering between the genres of
Read more– by James Webster – It feels like we’ve had a cracking year for Spoken Word in 2014, with the
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 James Webster and Dana Bubulj– We’re not 100% sure where we’re going. We’re not really sure what’ll happen
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