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Featured image of a hurry of english

a hurry of english

Mary Jean Chan has shown that being a celebrated poet with many accolades does not require the publication of a full collection. Chan is noted for her work in anthologies and competitions by many respected organisations such as The National Poetry Competition for which she secured second place in 2017. In the same year, she Read More

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Juke Box Jeopardy

The first thing one notices upon picking up Brian Johnstone’s latest poetry collection, Juke Box Jeopardy, is the binding. The pamphlet comes in a brightly coloured sleeve, like a record. It’s a promise that you have picked up something unique, maybe even fun. And Johnstone delivers. As the title and sleeve suggest, this is a Read More

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The Republic of Motherhood

Birmingham based Liz Berry’s most recent offering is a pamphlet of varied and relentlessly honest poems about new motherhood. At times heartbreakingly loving, at others pulling a sideways punch at the world as the new mother, this fierce yet poignant little collection is not afraid to expose the complexity of the experience, including its morally Read More

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there’s no such thing

Reading Lily Blacksell’s poetry is like watching a tragic movie, going to a comedy show and listening to an album of greatest hits on vinyl, all at the same time. This description, from the blurb of Lily Blacksell’s debut pamphlet there’s no such thing, is brilliantly accurate. The British writer, currently based in New York, Read More

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All this is implied

From the very first poem in this collection, ‘Object’, I am intrigued. It is an algebraic poem of six lines – a conversation between X and Y and what is implied is that X = Y. It is a bold and quirky start to a collection that asks questions about race, identity and inheritance. Will Read More

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Things We Never Knew

Hamish Whyte’s short verses in his third book of poems, Things We Never Knew, are gentle and witty, sometimes laugh-aloud funny, and often poignant. They cover spatial points ranging from Edinburgh and Glasgow to the Australian Outback to South Dakota, and temporal locations as disparate as the present, his childhood, and the year 1876. His Read More

Featured image of Quines – Poems in tribute to women of Scotland

Quines – Poems in tribute to women of Scotland

In eager anticipation, I pick up Gerda Stevenson’s second volume of poetry, Quines. Stevenson is a prolific and multi-talented Scottish artist, renowned for her work as an actor, playwright, director, poet and singer-songwriter.  This collection, published on International Women’s Day 2018, has been lauded by high-profile commentators, including Baroness Helena Kennedy QC, Lesley Riddoch and Read More

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House of Lords and Commons

When a new poetry collection has gained as much accolade as this second collection by Ishion Hutchinson, we can assume it’s something special. The title seems to refer to both highs and lows in his own life, high and low cultures, from the mythology of the Greeks to the Jamaican classroom of his childhood, and Read More

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A Melody Of Sorts

Ulsterman Jon Plunkett is both a poet and the impetus behind Perthshire’s Corbenic Poetry Path, an inspiring stroll through beautiful moorland and forest to the accompaniment of wayside poetry and poetic fragments carved into wood, stone and glass. His first full collection takes something of the wind-blown spirit of Corbenic, but adds the warmth and Read More

Featured image of Paolozzi at Large in Edinburgh: Artworks and Creative Responses

Paolozzi at Large in Edinburgh: Artworks and Creative Responses

‘It is monumental, more than the sum of its parts.’ (Christine De Luca) We are faced less with ‘how do you solve a problem like Maria?’, more how do you define a Titan like Paolozzi? If you can, how then do you celebrate his extraordinary legacy? Sculptor, collage-artist, printmaker, mosaicist, teacher. Collaborator with scientists. Activist. Read More

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