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Featured image of Small Island

Small Island

This stage adaptation of Andrea Levy’s Orange Prize-winning novel of the same name, staged in 2019, is unusually prescient, given how relevant the themes are today. Coincidentally, as I write this review, the world marks Windrush Day, marking the 72nd anniversary on which Caribbean individuals and families boarded the HMT Empire Windrush to journey to Read More

Featured image of Caught in between: A Creative Folio by Mareth Burns

Caught in between: A Creative Folio by Mareth Burns

Coming/Going The girl could step off the train, go round by the post office and the pubs, climb the hill and find herself next to the road between two grassy verges. And if she wanted to, she could peel away the layers; from daffodils, to snow, to burnt leaves and watch the video tape rewind. Read More

Featured image of Coriolanus

Coriolanus

  Josie Rourke’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s last tragedy & his last Roman play is uniquely suited to the sparse setting of the Donmar Warehouse. This small stage is open to the audience on three sides; only 14 chairs, a ladder, and the back wall serves to embody the whole of ancient Rome. Yet what it Read More

Featured image of A Streetcar Named Desire

A Streetcar Named Desire

‘I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.’  Blanche Dubois If you’re looking for a literary treat before lockdown’s slight easing, you could do worse than immerse yourself in the National Theatre’s compelling interpretation of the classic Tennessee Williams’ play, A Streetcar Named Desire.  This contemporary version has everything; from revolving stage, relevant music and Read More

Featured image of Secrets found in the deep by Thomasin Collins (Winner of the 2020 PNR prize for Creative Essaying at the University of Dundee)

Secrets found in the deep by Thomasin Collins (Winner of the 2020 PNR prize for Creative Essaying at the University of Dundee)

‘The story opens when I go to the gallery with you.’ I walked in with you. We were chatting, but I was only half-listening. I was distracted by the sculptures in the cabinets and the brightly painted mural on the wall. They faded behind me as we continued to walk and as I stepped up Read More

Featured image of Unpacking by Jamie Cameron

Unpacking by Jamie Cameron

I have a box of memories. It’s a square brown box – one of those used for moving to a new house, ‘memories’ scrawled on one side in black ink. For years it moved with me and my partner from flat to flat, accumulating a little more in weight each year as we collected little Read More

Featured image of ‘Poetry is only good at the big picture if it’s talking about the small detail’: An interview with John Glenday

‘Poetry is only good at the big picture if it’s talking about the small detail’: An interview with John Glenday

I am ravaged by a fever that incapacitates me for days. Every part of my body aches and my mind is occupied only with the sensation of intense discomfort and the wish for relief. I feel as though broken glass has settled inside my chest. Every inhalation agitates it into a cloud that stabs my Read More

Featured image of Open Windows

Open Windows

Songs drift from open windows: the radio, someone washing dishes, a tv, voices—more of an insight into people’s lives than the silent aquarium of closed glass. In Merrie Joy William’s collection, these open windows lead to childhood memories, romantic discovery, loss, life, faith and more. Her view into the past is never overly sentimental, but full Read More

Featured image of Gutter No.21

Gutter No.21

The sober aubergine cover of the latest issue of Gutter is distinct from the magazine’s customary vibrant jackets. In collaboration with guest editors Alycia Pirmohamed and Jay G Ying, Gutter makes a stand against tokenisation in this celebration of Black Asian and Minority Ethnic writers from Scotland and across the world. Exploring the multi-faceted aspects Read More

Featured image of ‘The Audience is Half the Poem’: An interview with Joelle Taylor

‘The Audience is Half the Poem’: An interview with Joelle Taylor

It is not hard to spot Joelle Taylor across a busy theatre foyer. The tall blonde quiff gives her away, but as I approach, I notice an open confidence that suggests performance poet too. I meet her on the penultimate day of the StAnza poetry festival, less than a fortnight before such gatherings become a Read More

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