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Featured image of Witch

Witch

Seven sections, each with seven poems, and each poem composed of seven couplets – sounds like an incantation? It isn’t. This is the formal structure of Damian Walford Davies’ new poetry collection, enticingly entitled, Witch. The witch hunt is chronicled in seven sections, each voiced in the first person by a single persona, except the third Read More

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White Lies

Lynn Michell’s novel White Lies explores the issues of truth and memory against the backdrop of Kenyan political history, whilst also more broadly exploring the place of the individual in pivotal historical moments. Michell’s story revolves around Eve, a middle aged woman caring for her aged and difficult father, David.  In an attempt to make their time Read More

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Tea at the Midland

Edgar Allan Poe, the celebrated short fiction enthusiast, is often attributed the quote: “A short story must have a single mood and every sentence must build towards it.” David Constantine, for one, seems to have taken this to heart. In his fourth collection of stories, Tea at the Midland, Constantine has created an outstanding work in Read More

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Tantie Diablesse

Beautifully woven narratives, coloured by the traditions and folklore of the poet’s native Trinidad and Tobago, form Fawzia Kane’s debut collection, Tantie Diablesse; theycombine to create an extremely engaging read. While her poetry contains autobiographical elements, Kane does not permit these moments to overpower the collection, thus allowing the poetry to achieve a sense of Read More

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Summer in February

The love triangle is a familiar trope in the movie industry, yet Summer in February (2013), a true love-triangle story, retains a significant amount of substance thanks to its authenticity. Jonathan Smith, a teacher of lead actor Dan Stevens, wrote the book and subsequent screenplay, providing a fascinating route from page to screen. The film centres on Read More

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Stories We Tell

In her documentary Stories We Tell director Sarah Polley offers a revealing insight into her own life as she presents the story of her mother’s extra-marital affair and her own uncertainties as to the true identity of her biological father. I must admit, I was unsure what to expect when I took my seat for this film. Read More

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The Specimen

Martha Lea’s The Specimen is set around the mid 1800’s, a time when there was increasing tension between religion and science. This friction and unease plays a significant role in the narrative, having a notable effect on the characters, in particular, Gwen Carrick and her relationship with her sister, Euphemia. Gwen is inspired by the works of Read More

Featured image of Shall We Gather at the River

Shall We Gather at the River

Featured image of Renoir

Renoir

My mother, in my youth, always advised against going to the cinema on days where the weather was hot and fine. I do feel, however, that she would surely view an outing to enjoy Gilles Bourdos’ Renoir as the kind of film for which exceptions must be made. Visually beautiful, wonderfully paced, and acted with the kind Read More

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Paradise: Love

Paradise: Love is the first instalment of Austrian director Ulrich Seidl’s Love, Faith, Hope trilogy which features a mother, her daughter and sister, each in search of happiness.   In this opening film, the mother, 50 year-old Austrian divorcee Teresa (Margarete Tiesel) leaves adolescent daughter Meli (Melanie Lenz) with her sister (Maria Hofstatter) to holiday at a Kenyan beach Read More

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