Thus the blue hour comes by Tess Jolly
– Reviewed by Emma Lee – The blue hour is the awkward hour in which it’s too early to get
Read more– Reviewed by Emma Lee – The blue hour is the awkward hour in which it’s too early to get
Read more– Reviewed by Matthew Hacke – Plainsong is Stephen Bone’s second pamphlet; his first, In The Cinema, was published in
Read more– Reviewed by David Mitchell – Grant Tarbard returns with this new pamphlet, Rosary of Ghosts. The collection follows him
Read more– Reviewed by Pat Edwards – Cry Baby is an intense little book, written in crisp, stunted lines. I cannot
Read more– Reviewed by Angela Topping – Many of Mab Jones’ poems in take your experience and peel it are voiced in
Read more– Reviewed by Grant Tarbard – Caroline Carver’s poems are woven with fine threads, without pomp, but with vulnerability and tempestuous
Read more– Reviewed by Charlie Baylis – To Have To Follow, a pamphlet of twenty four poems, is the result of a
Read more– Reviewed by Jessica Traynor – Border Lines is a work of psychogeography as much as poetry, making the topography
Read more– Reviewed by Elizabeth Rimmer – The Rag and Boneyard is described as a ‘take on the myth of Persephone, re-visioned
Read more– Reviewed by Humphrey Astley – Catching Light, the debut pamphlet by Devon poet Helen Boyles, is unlikely to excite
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