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Featured image of Bridge of Spies

Bridge of Spies

Steven Spielberg’s films, with their interest in uplifting character arcs and nostalgic portraits of the past, are often criticised as overly sentimental and nostalgic. Bridge of Spies does little to dissuade this criticism. Its Cold War political narrative is equally as interested in the story of James B. Donovan (Tom Hanks), a fundamentally good person Read More

Featured image of The Girl in the Dog-Tooth Coat

The Girl in the Dog-Tooth Coat

The Girl in the Dog-Tooth Coat is the debut collection of emerging talent Zelda Chappel. This compilation of fifty-nine short free-verse poems confronts themes of loss and longing, grief and regret, anxiety and escapism. Chappel’s voice is delicate yet biting, like a crisp morning frost. She cuts to the core of a distinctly female experience, Read More

Featured image of Bone Monkey

Bone Monkey

Janet Sutherland’s third collection, Bone Monkey, features a trickster of that name.  Sutherland develops a whole mythology for him, from creation through to death, told in sonnets, ballads, prose poems and free verse. In the opening lines of the sonnet, “Prequel”, Out of the void of chaos came the Earth and then Bone Monkey sprang Read More

Featured image of The Festival of Insignificance

The Festival of Insignificance

Milan Kundera’s The Festival of Insignificance seems poetic, personal and political on the one page and then dismissive and cynical on the very next. The novel is the perfect microcosm of the nihilistic modern world, and when that dystopia is set in the historically romantic city of Paris, it turns into a symbol of tragedy. Read More

Featured image of Portrait of the Quince as an Older Woman

Portrait of the Quince as an Older Woman

An arresting title offers a strong launching place for any book but the reader who tries to find the source of this particularly wonderful one will have to wait. The titular poem, unusually, is the very last in this, Ellen Phethean’s most recent, collection. By the time the reader finds it however, she will have Read More

Featured image of Playing House

Playing House

Katherine Stansfield’s debut collection, Playing House, is quirky and surreal, witty and menacing.  Her subject matter includes the auction of John Lennon’s tooth, bleach, jetlag, crisp sandwiches and office politics. It’s a collection which is refreshingly unthemed and varied in style, form and voice. In “Africa on BBC One”, an East African Shoebill is addressed: Read More

Featured image of Writers Read: Kirsty Gunn in conversation with Chris Powici

Writers Read: Kirsty Gunn in conversation with Chris Powici

  Click on the above image to view Writers Read: Kirsty Gunn in conversation with Chris Powici. Powici is a poet and academic, and also the editor of literary magazine Northwords Now. His latest poetry collection is This Weight of Light (Red Squirrel, 2015). You can read a new poem by Powici, “The God of Read More

Featured image of The Forbidden Room

The Forbidden Room

The Forbidden Room is not your average film, even for the arthouse cinema scene. It is essentially a series of vignettes, which, rather than occurring linearly one after another, interweave. In one segment a character will have a dream which itself becomes a completely different film. Some of these vignettes appear for five or ten Read More

Featured image of Carol

Carol

As one of the most nominated films of the year Carol sinks only your heart, and exceeds expectations. Set in early 1950s Manhattan – a tough climate for sexual deviancy and independent women – Todd Haynes’ latest picture of homosexuality is his most refined and subtly powerful. Adapted from Patricia Highsmith’s novel The Price of Read More

Featured image of An Interview with Colette Bryce

An Interview with Colette Bryce

I was born between the Creggan and the Bogside, To the sounds of crowds and smashing glass… “Derry”, The Whole and Rain-domed Universe To enter into conversation with Colette Bryce is to be drawn into a life marked not only by an Irish Catholic childhood, with its pleasures as well as its vivid memories of Read More

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