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Featured image of The Illustrated Woman (SHORTLISTED, FORWARD PRIZE FOR BEST COLLECTION)

The Illustrated Woman (SHORTLISTED, FORWARD PRIZE FOR BEST COLLECTION)

I picked up this title initially because I still blanche whenever my daughter shows me her new tattoos; but I also heard Helen Mort’s very interesting exchange with Lou Hopper about ‘getting inked’ on Radio 4’s One to One in February last year. Mort is, of course, an award-winning poet that is based in Sheffield and whose interests take in an astonishing range–mountain climbing, trail running, northern cites, conflict and motherhood—all handled with a sure and delicate lyricism, and a poet’s ear for the cadence and fall of the line. So The Illustrated Woman promised much.

Featured image of The Porpoise (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

The Porpoise (Shortlisted, The Goldsmiths Prize 2019)

Mark Haddon is best known for his 2003 bestseller, The Curious Incident of The Dog in the Night-time. The Porpoise is his fifth novel for adults and it begins with a tragic accident; a light aircraft collides with a grain silo. Philippe, a wealthy businessman loses his pregnant wife in the crash, but his baby Read More

Featured image of Surge (Shortlisted, 2019 TS Eliot Poetry Prize; Shortlisted, 2019 Forward Poetry Prize)

Surge (Shortlisted, 2019 TS Eliot Poetry Prize; Shortlisted, 2019 Forward Poetry Prize)

Not rivers, towers of blood. (‘Sentence’) In 1981, Glasgow School of Art’s Ceramics Department and its famous dances, were housed in the Haldane building, the city’s shambolic former police horse stables. This may have been a long way from New Cross Road, the tragedy, the official and media indifference in its aftermath and the lasting Read More

Featured image of ORDINARY PEOPLE (SHORTLISTED, 2019 women’s prize for fiction)

ORDINARY PEOPLE (SHORTLISTED, 2019 women’s prize for fiction)

Diana Evans’ third novel, Ordinary People, dives deep into the domestic. It revolves around the struggling marital lives of two thirty-something couples living in London with their children. Melissa and Michael were once electric together, full of adventure. Stephanie and Damien were perfect opposites. However, as time passes the couples find themselves ‘living in the Read More

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