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Featured image of Here

Here

Raymond Ramcharitar dons many hats. He is a playwright, poet, short story writer, journalist and critic; a polymath with degrees in Economics, English Literature, and Cultural History and a graduate of the Boston University’s creative writing program. And all these biographical details seem to lend his latest collection Here, its definitive style and quality. Here Read More

Featured image of Merman

Merman

Merman opens with the obliquely powerful titular poem (an Arvon International Poetry Award winner 2010), justifiably described by the Poet Laureate as “wonderful”. Indeed, it is the outstanding poem in this excellent, multi-layered collection – O’Brien’s fourth. The cover representation of her post-Arvon collaboration with visual artist, Ray Murphy, weights that single poem still more. Read More

Featured image of L’Inconnu du lac (Stranger by the Lake)

L’Inconnu du lac (Stranger by the Lake)

(France 2013) 14-20 March DCA Camus’s L’etranger meets Al Pacino’s Cruising in Stranger by the Lake (L’Inconnu du lac), the  story of a killer at the gay beach on Lake Sainte Croix in the Côte D’Azur.   Alain Guiraudie, winner of the  Best Director award at Cannes in 2013, seems singularly uninterested in thinking about psychological motivation Read More

Featured image of Peter Gregor Landscapes

Peter Gregor Landscapes

3-30 March 2014; Harbour Cafe, Tayport Peter Gregor’s first exhibition of some of his landscape photographs takes you aback with the strength of beauty of the pictures and the sheer quality of the finished prints. A lifelong love of photography and a strong eye for what makes a picture special have come together in this Read More

Featured image of In the Rosary Garden

In the Rosary Garden

Nicola White saw off over 350 other authors to win the 2013 Dundee International Book Prize with her debut novel, In the Rosary Garden. Based upon a notorious case of infanticide in Ireland in the 1980s, and set predominantly in White’s home town of Dublin, the plot centres on Alison Hogan or Ali for short. Read More

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NW

Fans of White Teeth will find much to satisfy them in Zadie Smith’s latest work. Weaving together three narratives Smith once again proves her skill at describing a moment and a place in time, in all its inherent beauty and ugliness. Centred on London’s Kilburn area and the Caldwell estate, the story is told through Read More

Featured image of The Absolutely Other

The Absolutely Other

Mary Modeen’s latest print exhibition, The Absolutely Other, removes the observer from their immediate surroundings and deposits them in a curious version of the visual world they inhabit. Modeen’s enduring interest in space and the way we relate to it is worked through here in terms of the uncanny. Recognizable spaces jostle with others that Read More

Featured image of The Grand Budapest Hotel

The Grand Budapest Hotel

Despite my admiration for his style and wit, even I can admit that many of Wes Anderson’s films have rough edges. Sheer narrative drops trip you into ridges in the mind of the filmmaker that sometimes feels too personal, while jarring stalagmites can obstruct your understanding of the presence and truth of the story. Anderson Read More

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Jacob’s Folly

Rebecca Miller’s latest novel would be as well titled Jacob’s Feast as Jacob’s Folly; so voracious is the author’s appetite for detail and the narrator’s lust for experience. Born into a poor family of Jewish peddlers in eighteenth century Paris, Jacob Cerf breathes his last while contemplating the pooling rivulets of wax on an ornate, Read More

Featured image of Train Dreams

Train Dreams

Denis Johnson’s Train Dreams, a novella about an early 20th-century logger and bridge builder in the northwestern United States, has garnered rave reviews from publications such as The Scotsman, The Observer, and The New York Times. Its straightforward, even stilted, prose imitates the hapless career of the orphaned Robert Granier. Robert grows up north of Read More

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