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Featured image of All Alone Together: Bruegel’s The Adoration of the Kings

All Alone Together: Bruegel’s The Adoration of the Kings

  Because the world is so faithless, I go my way in mourning. (Pieter Bruegel) Paintings ask viewers to do many things, like how to see them in their time. No names help color Bruegel’s staring scene, make sense of bending people with blunt faces and harsh clothes. Bruegel’s Adoration does not adore the child Read More

Featured image of All Under One Roof

All Under One Roof

Evelyn Schlag’s All Under One Roof captivates the reader using conversational prose, and a pattern of discovery in the innocent encounter of the places and the experiences that the speaker of the poem grows through. Translated by Kareen Leeder with a fine touch, the collection draws from her two German-language collections – Language of a Read More

Featured image of No. 25

No. 25

Poetics in Geraldine Clarkson’s work insist on our attention long before we have even embarked on our journey of understanding. Her latest chapbook is no exception. The collection opens with a reference to the “lovely” and “elegant” River Leam in Clarkson’s home in the Midlands, from where she wanders in time and place, but the Read More

Featured image of WRITING PRACTICE AND STUDY 2018 SHOWCASE:  ‘Do It for Ed’ by Tracy Gow

WRITING PRACTICE AND STUDY 2018 SHOWCASE: ‘Do It for Ed’ by Tracy Gow

The story so far… Spring 2014: Twenty-year-old Agnes Bee has received notification that her husband, Dougie, has started divorce proceedings. (They married because Agnes was pregnant, but the baby died late in the pregnancy.) Agnes is chronically depressed. She wants to change her life but doesn’t know where to begin. Her best friend, Kath suggests they Read More

Featured image of WRITING PRACTICE AND STUDY 2018 SHOWCASE: ‘Solo’ by Lynsey Macready

WRITING PRACTICE AND STUDY 2018 SHOWCASE: ‘Solo’ by Lynsey Macready

Monday 16 April Tonight was the first and last date with Geoff. 43 solid minutes I listened to him droning on at one point. I texted Jules at 7:01 telling her he’d just started talking about mushrooms and at 7:44 he was still going. Who knew there was so much to learn? Apparently, he recently Read More

Featured image of WRITING PRACTICE AND STUDY 2018 SHOWCASE: ‘Earthbound Design’ by Jed Edwards

WRITING PRACTICE AND STUDY 2018 SHOWCASE: ‘Earthbound Design’ by Jed Edwards

We left the train station and turned right, towards the river Tilt. Close to the track we found a shop and a public toilet, for one last stop before heading up the valley. Mark bought an apple and a block of chocolate. I found an off-brand sports drink in the fridge and gulped it all. Read More

Featured image of The Cemetery in Barnes

The Cemetery in Barnes

Gabriel Josipovici’s The Cemetery in Barnes (2018) is a very short novel, with the story spread across a mere one hundred pages. However, this is a novel of burning intensity that leaves the reader in a constant state of uncertainty with plotline that jumps between different phases in the protagonist’s, an unnamed translator, life. These Read More

Featured image of Hummingbirds Between the Pages

Hummingbirds Between the Pages

Chris Arthur’s latest essay collection is unmistakably about hummingbirds. However, this innocuous fact is far more revealing than one might expect. Arthur’s hummingbirds are varied; sometimes they are avian, but they are also objects, words, creatures and people. To be a hummingbird is to capture the attention of the beholder and in doing so, challenge Read More

Featured image of She Lives There Still

She Lives There Still

Mary Leader, an American lawyer-turned-poet, has found a home with the British-based Publisher Shearsman Books. She Lives There Still is her second title to be published with them, and they are due to re-issue her two earlier works that are currently out-of-print. A fifth collection has already been completed. Perhaps this match should hold no Read More

Featured image of Kennedy’s Children

Kennedy’s Children

Kennedy’s Children, by Robert Patrick opens in a New York bar. The year is 1975. The month, February, is the one usually considered the most depressing all over the northern hemisphere. The day is St Valentine’s Day.  Six lonely characters inhabit the set, including the barkeep. The play tracks the lives of five archetypal Americans Read More

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