Kianush collected and published his poems for children and young adults in eight books, all of wh...
Irene Koronas's Ninth Iota explains why humans want to craft something like civilization. It's no...
In The Geometric Kingdom Rupert Loydell and Maria Stadnicka write about loss, grief and mourning ...
When I first began my research into the Pendle witches in 1984 it proved exceedingly difficult to...
Dudley's indulgence of what the poet Charles Bernstein has called 'writing centered on its wordne...
Dave Turnip is a cathartic alter-ego, existing through narrative fragmentation yet searching for ...
There are two ways of seeing this book. One: it is a homage to Michael Drayton's 1619 sonnet sequ...
is poetry a fast business? what happens after ghezi park? how many times will bakunin celebrate h...
Why do I trust Hanson? Because his is embodied, emotional, affecting work driven by the urgency o...
Here, we are reminded that poetry is more than the ivory towers of academia. Writing a parable of...
James Russell, an Emeritus Professor of Psychology at Cambridge, has been studying psychology for...
There is a visceral, unflinching eye at work in Fatbergs, that begins with the arresting title an...
Mötley Crüe's fourth studio album, Girls, Girls, Girls, was released on my tenth birthday in 1987...
An ethnographic bricolage of fragmentary narratives and lost voices from a future tribal culture ...
'Ruth Stacey's How to Wear Grunge eschews nostalgia and the self-fulfilling mythology of rock's n...
Intimately moving over and returning to a valley and fields to the south of Newton-le-Willows, La...
In these twenty-six complex, finely-crafted poems, we see Eileen Tabios at the height of her poet...
Strata Smith and the Anthropocene
This is a sequence of what I retrospectively regard as 'countersonnets', and they are composed fr...
These poems sparkle with life, with the life of the everyday, fleeting moments of work, play and ...
Taking only the sonnets Wyatt 'translated' from Petrarch, but adding a few of his own, Robert She...