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Poetry

Featured image of Hurting God – Part Essay Part Rhyme

Hurting God – Part Essay Part Rhyme

This is Rita Ann Higgins’ ninth collection, a poetic memoir about her working class, Catholic upbringing, a collection about loss, language, poetry and travel. There is a strong thread of repression and fear running through her work, which describes the drudgery of women’s lives, the poverty of poverty, and the sadness of realisation, all softened Read More

Featured image of House of Bees

House of Bees

This collection is not for those who seek light reading or any form of reassurance. Opening with a poem not listed in the contents, Stephen Murray immediately throws us into a cuttingly real and tumultuous world. Murray cleaves open his world with an honesty that is almost chilling; he invites us into a past littered Read More

Featured image of Wrong Evenings

Wrong Evenings

Those who considered Simon Jenner’s first collection, About Bloody Time, difficult, might equally have been anticipating this, his second book of poetry. It contains nothing glib or easily accessible, and nothing which will have the reader close the volume after one reading. It is none the worse for that. Jenner’s intellect scintillates in the diversity Read More

Featured image of Slowly, As If

Slowly, As If

One of post-apartheid South Africa’s contributions to global culture is an affirmation of ubuntu* – an indigenous concept which emphasises the folded-togetherness of human being. Karen Press’s new collection, which finds poetry in subjects as diverse as Jacob Zuma and the war in Iraq, is mindful of our collective failure to put this principle into Read More

Featured image of Rooster

Rooster

Although there are two “Suites”, of five and eight sections respectively, and a page-length prose poem (“West-Coast Colloquy”), the keynote of this volume is minimalism: short free-verse lyrics, many with short lines. It’s a common form in post-1960s poetry; one which hopes to imbue language with intensity through terseness, and invite us to focus on Read More

Featured image of The Kitchen of Lovely Contraptions

The Kitchen of Lovely Contraptions

Nominated for the Aldeburgh First Collection Prize in 2011, The Kitchen of Lovely Contraptions restores complexity, colour and light to a world which had turned fifty shades of grey. Jacqueline Saphra writes with disarming honesty about sex, control, femininity, gender roles and relationships. Above all, these are intensely personal poems. The first section on childhood Read More

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