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Featured image of Where the Bridge Lies

Where the Bridge Lies

At its simplest, established writer Frank Woods’ debut novel Where the Bridge Lies is a melodramatic detective story. It features revelatory deathbed confessions, long-lost relatives, a femme fatale, a mysterious commune and even an investigative journalist for a protagonist. But beneath this sensationalist exterior lies a deeper rumination on time, trauma and the ties that Read More

Featured image of ‘Reconstruction’ by Alice Winterburn

‘Reconstruction’ by Alice Winterburn

Bullet Point Are all repeated acts what make me who I am? It seems so, with the changes I make just being added to the list. Even if I scratch one off, there are always more to add. The clothes I won’t throw away The perfume I rarely use The overused baking tray and my Read More

Featured image of a mastery of english: a conversation with Mary Jean Chan

a mastery of english: a conversation with Mary Jean Chan

Tourists visit St Andrews for three main reasons; it’s the home of golf, the grounds of the renowned University where Prince Harry met Kate, and the StAnza international poetry festival in March, which bring poetry paramours to St Andrews’ historical streets. I reviewed Mary Jean Chan’s debut pamphlet, a hurry of english, some time ago Read More

Featured image of THE GOOSE MISTRESS

THE GOOSE MISTRESS

The Goose Mistress: A Dark Love Story is Conner McAleese’s debut novel. He lives in Dundee and studied History, and Writing Practice and Study at the University of Dundee. Eva Braun is a historical figure – you either know who she was or you have never heard of her. It was the same during her Read More

Featured image of As the Women Lay Dreaming

As the Women Lay Dreaming

With this moving and poetic novel, full of the rhythms of Gaelic and Doric, Donald Murray has created both a memorial and a song of love, grief and lament, reflected in the windswept landscapes of the Isle of Lewis. Narrated by Alasdair Cruikshank, retired Glasgow art teacher, grandson of Tormod Morrison, a fictional survivor of Read More

Featured image of Lost Children’s Archive: A Novel (Longlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

Lost Children’s Archive: A Novel (Longlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

In a recent interview for The Guardian Valeria Luiselli complained that we demand too little of the novel as readers or as students of the form. In upholding “relatability” and “empathy” as praiseworthy qualities, we mistake what are  entry level virtues for the high bar. It goes without saying then that this is an ambitious Read More

Featured image of Freshwater (Longlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

Freshwater (Longlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

Freshwater follows the life of Ada, narrated by the gods who inhabited her at birth. What could be seen as a cluster of psychiatric disorders is depicted instead as a spiritual struggle of finding one’s way in the world, all happening in Ada’s head, in the marble room where all her selves are contained. Akwaeke Read More

Featured image of Swan Song (Longlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

Swan Song (Longlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

Swan Song is a historical work of fiction, and the first novel by Texan Kelleigh Greenberg-Jephcott. It re-tells the fantastic life of Truman Capote, author of Breakfast At Tiffany’s and In Cold Blood. With a playful interception on the rigidity of biography, it is written in a thrilling collective voice, an ‘our’ which weaves collective memory Read More

Featured image of To Leave with the Reindeer

To Leave with the Reindeer

‘You don’t know if you like animals but you’re desperate to have one, you want a creature.’ So starts this captivating and strange novel by Rosenthal in this new translation by award-winning translator Sophie Lewis of the 2010 original. Is To Leave with the Reindeer a novel, though? The book’s writing is a hybrid of Read More

Featured image of ‘Colours’: A lyric memoir-essay by Rebecca Arthur

‘Colours’: A lyric memoir-essay by Rebecca Arthur

  If I were a painter I should paint these first impressions in pale yellow, silver, and green. (Virginia Woolf) [1]                   Blue I can paint my earliest memory in blue – my memory of the jam jar I dropped at my parents’ feet after being so certain I Read More

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