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Featured image of The Living Option: Selected Poems

The Living Option: Selected Poems

Karen Solie, who won the Canadian Griffin Prize with her third collection Pigeon, is very much a poet of unrest. Many of her poems refer to locations associated with travel, such as roadside motels. The Living Option: Selected Poems, conveys said restlessness much like a best-of album of a musical artist. One might say that Read More

Featured image of A Double Sorrow: Troilus and Criseyde (Costa Poetry Award Shortlist)

A Double Sorrow: Troilus and Criseyde (Costa Poetry Award Shortlist)

Following the enormous and in many ways unexpected success of Seamus Heaney’s translation of Beowulf in 1999, it may come as little surprise that Faber have begun to ask a selection of Britain’s other leading poets to produce modern versions of some of the equally important mainstays of the early period canon. Ten years on Read More

Featured image of The Echo of My Mother (El eco de mi madre)

The Echo of My Mother (El eco de mi madre)

This, Tamara Kamenszain’s eighth poetry volume, was first published in 2010 as part of the “Sur Translation Program”. The Echo of My Mother responds to the loss of her mother, first to Alzheimer’s disease and then ultimately to death coming to terms with the silences and dislocation caused by that loss, and finally reassembling her Read More

Featured image of X-Men: Days of Future Past

X-Men: Days of Future Past

Days of Future Past is a much needed game changer for the X-Men franchise. After director Bryan Singer’s departure from the pre-production of X3 (2006), the series seemed to lose its way somewhat until it was revitalised by Matthew Vaughn’s prequel film, X-Men: First Class in 2011. Future Past is a better film than First Read More

Featured image of Nonsense

Nonsense

Christopher Reid is part of an exclusive club of English poets in as much as he is genuinely funny. Though by no means a ‘comic’ poet – that tag hardly does justice to his extraordinary depth and range, nor to the poignancy of his subject matter — Reid is very adept at staring into the Read More

Featured image of Secrecy

Secrecy

There has been no shortage of praise for Rupert Thomson’s latest work of historical fiction, Secrecy; the Independent called it “fabulously atmospheric” while the Financial Times lauded the novel for its “superb depiction of a pre-Enlightenment world, shimmering with superstitions, repression and incomprehension”. Set in a meticulously realised 17th century Florence, Secrecy follows “Zummo”, a Read More

Featured image of The Goldfinch

The Goldfinch

In recent interviews,  Donna Tartt has spoken eloquently about the immersive and addictive magic of good stories, strong characters and plot, and of her desire to work these qualities into her own writing. While such aims might describe a popular novel consumed at great speed only to be tossed aside equally quickly, Tartt’sThe Goldfinch is altogether Read More

Featured image of Heli

Heli

The past few months have seen a surge in high-profile persons, including Nobel Prize-winning economists, calling to end the global ‘War on Drugs’, especially in the US. With marijuana decriminalisation laws and promises to curb high incarceration numbers, it is easy to forget the daily savagery that exists in neighbouring Mexico. Heli is a tragic Read More

Featured image of Before the Winter Chill (Avant l’Hiver)

Before the Winter Chill (Avant l’Hiver)

Reviews for Philippe Claudel’s slow-burning psychological drama have been mixed at best, many critics seemingly being unable to overlook the conceptual similarities it bears to Michael Haneke’s Cache of 2005. It’s true that the films share a star in Daniel Auteuil and both are premised on the delivery of anonymous and increasingly sinister gifts to Read More

Featured image of The Undertaking

The Undertaking

The defeat of the Germans at the battle of Stalingrad in 1943 initiated the German retreat and is considered by many to be the turning point of the Second World War. Understandably then, the battle forms the inspiration for a multitude of works on the Second World War. The subject matter of Audrey Magee’s The Read More

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