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Featured image of Hag-seed (LONGLISTED, 2017 BAILEYS WOMEN’S PRIZE)

Hag-seed (LONGLISTED, 2017 BAILEYS WOMEN’S PRIZE)

Hag-Seed : The Tempest Retold is part of the Hogarth series of re-workings of Shakespeare by “acclaimed and bestselling novelists of today” (p. 295), and of course there will be readers who cannot think why such a thing is necessary.  But that is a nettle to be grasped another day. In Atwood’s story, actor-director Felix Read More

Featured image of Complete Poems

Complete Poems

  Roger Francis Langley was a Warwickshire-born poet, as well as a close friend and contemporary of avant-gardist J.H.Prynne. Complete Poems is a summation of his writing spanning a relatively short career – from 1994’s Twelve Poems to his final collection The Face of It, published four years before his death in 2011. His poem, Read More

Featured image of The Not-Dead And The Saved (And Other Stories)

The Not-Dead And The Saved (And Other Stories)

From the very start of Kate Clanchy’s The Not-Dead And The Saved (And Other Stories), we fall straight into her powerless mess of human nature responding to a power-hungry, often pessimistic world. Clanchy’s collection of short stories considers various forms of motherhood in respect to personal development. Through dimensional, flawed characters, and with notable proficiency, Read More

Featured image of Barkskins (LONGLISTED, 2017 BAILEYS WOMEN’S PRIZE)

Barkskins (LONGLISTED, 2017 BAILEYS WOMEN’S PRIZE)

Barkskins: a simple title for a book which is vast in scope and ambition. Pulitzer Prize-winner Annie Proulx of course has a distinguished background in considering North America’s growing pains protracted over centuries, cultures and evolving politics. She is well able to recognise which grafts take and which do not. So who better to tackle Read More

Featured image of Monstrous Bodies (Chasing Mary Shelley down Peep O’Day Lane)

Monstrous Bodies (Chasing Mary Shelley down Peep O’Day Lane)

This Dundee Rep and Poorboy co-production has genuine ambition that is apparent from the moment you first read the advertising for the play to the final bow of the necessarily extensive cast. That is not stated in a way that is intended to condescend. It is meant as a compliment in that they are trying Read More

Featured image of Stephen Carruthers interviews Joe Douglas (Associate Artistic Director, Dundee Rep)

Stephen Carruthers interviews Joe Douglas (Associate Artistic Director, Dundee Rep)

(This is a lightly edited transcript of the interview; to view the whole interview, please click image above) Stephen Carruthers: Good Afternoon. I’m Stephen Carruthers from the Dundee University Review of the Arts and I’m here with Joe Douglas, the Associate Artistic Director of Dundee Rep Theatre. Joe Douglas: Hello. SC: Joe, you joined the Read More

Featured image of Vivien Williams in conversation with Kirsty Gunn on The Big Music at University of Dundee

Vivien Williams in conversation with Kirsty Gunn on The Big Music at University of Dundee

(This is a lightly edited transcript of a filmed interview that can be watched by clicking on the image above.) Vivien Williams: Hello, I’m Vivien Williams and I am a research assistant at the University of Glasgow where I also completed recently a Ph.D on the cultural history of the bagpipe in Britain. The bagpipe Read More

Featured image of Ed’s Dead

Ed’s Dead

Deadlier than the Male, the tabloids said. They didn’t know the half of it. When reviewing Russel McLean’s previous novel Cry Uncle,  I used the following sentence, “The gritty and honest narration has a truly Scottish attitude.” This is also true, perhaps even more so, of his newest book Ed’s Dead. McLean has already established Read More

Featured image of An interview with Sandra Ireland

An interview with Sandra Ireland

I sit in the hidden café of Bonar Hall (as a four-year undergrad student I had no idea it existed) waiting for Sandra Ireland. I hold her book in my hands and wonder what she’ll be like. The book is macabre and unsettling, dead gerbils as hand puppets and warm mugs of coffee in an Read More

Featured image of Letters Against the Firmament

Letters Against the Firmament

“The poetic moans of this century have been, for the most part, a banal patina of snobbery, vanity and sophistry: we’re in need of a new prosody[…]” (“Letter on Riots and Doubt”) If, like me, you spend too much of your free time skulking around the darker, meme-ier corners of YouTube, you may have encountered Read More

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