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

Normal People (Longlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

In her second novel, Sally Rooney delivers a compelling love story set in the West of Ireland and grounded in the political realities of recent times. Normal People was hotly anticipated, well received, and continues to see Rooney lauded as a generational writer. Nevertheless, the passivity with which the millennial label is applied within critical Read More

Featured image of THE SILENCE OF THE GIRLS (SHORTLISTED, 2019 WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR FICTION)

THE SILENCE OF THE GIRLS (SHORTLISTED, 2019 WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR FICTION)

Modern feminist revisions of Greek mythology are in vogue. Following Madeleine Miller’s feminist reworking of Homer’s Iliad (The Song of Achilles, 2012) and The Odyssey (Circe, 2018), Pat Barker’s The Silence of the Girls also retells the story of The Iliad from a female perspective. Where Patroclus, Achilles’ steadfast companion, narrates Miller’s Trojan tale of Read More

Featured image of Twitters for a Lark 

Twitters for a Lark 

Twitters for a Lark is not a single-author collection nor is it, strictly speaking, an anthology. What is hidden behind the colourful book cover emblazed with the words ‘Poetry of the European Union of Imaginary Authors’ is a unique endeavour bringing together some of Britain’s most innovative and exciting contemporary poetic voices. The book contains collaborative Read More

Featured image of PRAISE SONG FOR BUTTERFLIES (Longlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

PRAISE SONG FOR BUTTERFLIES (Longlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

‘Tell all the truth but tell it slant’ If Emily Dickinson’s much-quoted line is a poets’ mantra, not for the first time reviewing, I have to ask – surely its application is wider? When Picasso unleashed Guernica‘s terrible pain and fury, how could he tell that trauma, other than slant? A creative act, burning the Read More

Featured image of THE PISCES (LONGLISTED, 2019 WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR FICTION)

THE PISCES (LONGLISTED, 2019 WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR FICTION)

Melissa Broder is an accomplished poet, essayist and columnist. The Pisces is her first novel and it ventures between the realms of history, myth and the personal traumas that her protagonist faces: men, relationships and sexual encounters. The protagonist, Lucy, is a PhD student in Arizona studying the work of the Ancient Greek poet, Sappho. Read More

Featured image of You Can’t Read a Good Book Without Wishing You’d Written It: An Interview with Cynthia Rogerson

You Can’t Read a Good Book Without Wishing You’d Written It: An Interview with Cynthia Rogerson

We meet in a restaurant situated at the water’s edge of the Cromarty Firth, just outside the Ross-shire town of Evanton where Cynthia Rogerson lives. It is early in the day because she will be on ‘grandkid duty’ later.  She is the prize-winning author of five novels and a collection of short stories and it Read More

Featured image of MY SISTER, THE SERIAL KILLER (Shortlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

MY SISTER, THE SERIAL KILLER (Shortlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

With its stylish cover and alluring title, Oyinkan Braithwaite’s debut novel is as striking as it looks. My Sister, the Serial Killer tells you everything you need to know before the opening pages. But that’s not to say it’s predictable and doesn’t surprise at times.  The novel centres around two sisters, Korede, a nurse, and Read More

Featured image of Above the Waterfall

Above the Waterfall

Originally published in the US in 2015, Above the Waterfall is the sixth of seven novels by award-winning American novelist, poet and short-story writer, Ron Rash.  Born in South Carolina, where he now lives, Rash grew up in North Carolina. He teaches fiction writing at Western Carolina University where he holds the John Parris Chair Read More

Featured image of Vaulted Marvels Book Launch

Vaulted Marvels Book Launch

Featured image of Heroines from Abroad

Heroines from Abroad

Christine Marendon’s debut collection Heroines from Abroad are poems written in her native German. She has been published online, in magazines, and anthologies. This bi-lingual collection is about reflecting on life. The poems are not always straightforward and take some time to process. Since they are never longer than a single page, one has time Read More

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