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Featured image of The Told World

The Told World

Angela Gardner’s collection The Told World can be taken to be as an acute observation of the human experience. It shifts from the almost tactile nature of one’s immersion in certain everyday moments to a quiet, almost detached meditation upon them. Welsh-born Gardner who now lives in Australia is an artist as well as a Read More

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Oh Marina Girl

Graham Lironi makes a noteworthy contribution to the large quantities of crime fiction continuously being published with his short and entertaining mystery-thriller Oh Marina Girl. Lironi, once a student in Dundee, delivers a book which is rich in narrative skills, a strong sense of character and unpredictable plot twists- whilst taking a closer look at Read More

Featured image of Volwys & Other Stories

Volwys & Other Stories

Volwys & Other Stories is a collection of science fiction stories, culminating in a novella entitled Volwys. Douglas Thompson has published eight books to a mostly divided critical reception, with reviewers undecided on whether or not his books are exemplary of the genre. Volwys & Other Stories definitely belongs to the science fiction genre, imaginatively Read More

Featured image of Deep Lane (Shortlisted for the 2015 TS Eliot Prize for Poetry)

Deep Lane (Shortlisted for the 2015 TS Eliot Prize for Poetry)

Mark Doty’s ninth poetry collection, Deep Lane, opens gloriously, with a knowing nod to Seamus Heaney: When I’m down on my knees pulling up wild mustard by the roots before it sets seed, hauling the old ferns further into the shade, I’m talking to the anvil of darkness [.] It’s a tricky collection to review, Read More

Featured image of The Hotel Oneira

The Hotel Oneira

The Hotel Oneira is, indisputably, technically brilliant. August Kleinzahler demonstrates exceptional linguistic skill throughout, flitting between dialects and frequently employing words both obscure and invented. “A History of Western Music: Chaper 44 (Bebop)” appears to function purely as an exercise in capturing the rhythms of that genre: A ramp’d up dance call it cha-cha-faux-bocci CHOC-A-LATTA-CHOCK-A-LITA-CHOC-A-TIKKA-LOTTA Read More

Featured image of In the Catacombs: A Summer Among the Dead Poets of West Norwood Cemetery

In the Catacombs: A Summer Among the Dead Poets of West Norwood Cemetery

From the outset, Chris McCabe makes it clear that In the Catacombs is not merely a research project but the fruits of a personal challenge; at its most basic, his quest is to explore the posthumous appraisal of any poet is in relation to his or her innate talent and/or popularity enjoyed while alive. Early Read More

Featured image of Play with Me

Play with Me

Having already published two acclaimed chapbooks, Michael Pedersen offers a remarkable first full-length collection. From the start, it is clear that these pieces are to be performed, not merely read. Each is written in free verse, often without stanzaic limitations, and Pedersen also makes extensive use of internal rhyme and alliteration. Consider the alliterative and Read More

Featured image of Not All Honey

Not All Honey

7 Across : Poet finds himself in the doldrums. Deny everything! (5, 7) Roddy Lumsden has done as much as anyone in modern British poetry to explore and develop form. A string of engrossing and inventive collections stretching back nearly twenty years has cemented his reputation as a singular voice, happy to work with wildly Read More

Featured image of [————]: Placeholder

[————]: Placeholder

“Carnal”, “emetic”, “wilfully avant-garde”, “dizzying”, “onanistic”, “brave”…. These are but a few of the impressions that ended up scribbled in front of me as I read through [————]: Placeholder, a collection that cherry picks from the 2004-15 work of American poet Rob Halpern. In truth, this collection pummelled me: it pulled me all over the Read More

Featured image of A Shed for Wood

A Shed for Wood

Picking up Daniel Thomas Moran’s seventh poetry collection, A Shed for Wood, I found the very title intriguing. I wondered at its importance and so turned to the writing itself, intent on discovering the ideas and implications stowed within — its “poetic” meaning, so to speak. What I did discern was that such an approach Read More

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