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Featured image of The Remedies (Shortlisted, 2016 T S Eliot Poetry Prize)

The Remedies (Shortlisted, 2016 T S Eliot Poetry Prize)

The American transcendentalist Henry David Thoreau wrote, “Nature will bear the closest inspection. She invites us to lay our eye level with her smallest leaf, and take an insect view of its plain”. Katharine Towers’ second poetry collection, The Remedies, is a clarion call to a kind of modern day  transcendentalism. She might not wear Read More

Featured image of Pictures From An Exhibition

Pictures From An Exhibition

They say a lifelike portrait has eyes that follow you round the room; the four pairs of eyes on the cover of this collection by Maureen Duffy seem to do just that. The striking design by Rupert Gowar-Cliffe is arresting. Whose eyes are these? Are they Duffy’s? Or are they our mind’s eyes as we Read More

Featured image of A Formula for Night: New and Selected Poems

A Formula for Night: New and Selected Poems

I wanted people to sit still for one goddam minute but they flash through your life –                portraits are for the dead. In these lines, Tamar Yoseloff voices Jackson Pollock as part of a remarkable narrative sequence, but such is her versatility that it may also speak of her own prolific, multi-faceted output. An American, Read More

Featured image of The Good Guy (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa First Novel Award)

The Good Guy (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa First Novel Award)

It is human nature to be attracted to that which we feel we can relate to, things that resonate within us. And perhaps that is why as a debut novel, The Good Guy, is such a memorable first impression. Inspired by her own experience, Susan Beale offers a compelling insight into the classic tale: the Read More

Featured image of The Gustav Sonata (Longlisted, 2017 Baileys Women’s Prize)

The Gustav Sonata (Longlisted, 2017 Baileys Women’s Prize)

Rose Tremain’s masterful, melancholic and ambitious novel is brimful of the sights and smells of post-war Switzerland, leaving little to the imagination.  Dispelling myths of serene neutrality, her book leads us though a winding path of uncertainty and angst, where “neutrality” is replaced with thorny indifference and there is little grey area between friendship and servitude. In this tantalising tale of adolescence, we follow Gustav Perle on his struggle of discovery. There are few heart-warming moments Read More

Featured image of Sunshine (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa Poetry Award)

Sunshine (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa Poetry Award)

“This book is gonna be a killer. It’s gonna suck me dry, / suck me white, suck my insides out and    leave me hollow and high.” (“And All the Things That We Could Do I Face Today”) A standard literary trope is to create expectations and defy them. So, to a seasoned reader, a Read More

Featured image of Days Without End  (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa Novel Award)

Days Without End (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa Novel Award)

In recent years, Sebastian Barry’s literary career has had tremendous world-wide recognition and success. The list of awards and nominations his works has garnered seems endless. From The Steward of Christendom (1995) which won him The Christopher Ewart-Biggs Memorial Prize, through A Long Long Way (2005) (Man Booker Prize shortlisted), to one of his most Read More

Featured image of My Name is Leon (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa First Novel Award)

My Name is Leon (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa First Novel Award)

My Name is Leon is Kit de Waal’s first published novel. Her short fiction has achieved success in the Bridport, Costa and Bath short story awards. A long career working with children in care made the subject matter a natural choice. Carol has given birth to a baby brother for Leon. Baby Jake is white Read More

Featured image of The Essex Serpent (Longlisted, 2017 Baileys Women’s Prize)

The Essex Serpent (Longlisted, 2017 Baileys Women’s Prize)

A sleepy Essex village is roused to a simmering hysteria as rumours that a monstrous 17th century winged sea serpent has returned, causing an oppressive pall of paranoia to descend on those who live by the banks of the Blackwater. The local vicar, educated and thoroughly modern, battles the rising superstitions of the villagers, a Read More

Featured image of The Words in My Hand (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa First Novel Award)

The Words in My Hand (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa First Novel Award)

Stories have the power to entrance and captivate, giving them the ability to teach, comfort and even inspire the reader or listener. In The Words in My Hand, Guinevere Glasfurd explores the impact of words and writing in the life of Helena Jans, René Descartes’s maid and also mother to his illegitimate child. Helena was Read More

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