When your child is born, the world changes before your eyes. You learn to know yourself anew: as ...
Phoebe Wagner's poetry is a kind of undressing. Offering up the social and sexual uncertainties o...
Gboyega Odubanjo's debut marks the start of an exciting career. His is a voice that draws you in,...
Charlotte Geater's poems for my FBI agent takes us down a Lynchian rabbit hole in which a sad and...
Fifty of contemporary poetry's most exciting voices speak out about mental health, in this ground...
Amy Acre's second pamphlet reaches both arms out to the wild of being woman, the blood of being m...
Suedehead, pulp horror writer, and man about town; the UK poetry scene would be a duller place wi...
Trespass across the human landscape of Setareh Ebrahimi's world.You'll find yourself a willing vo...
There is an arresting and profound specificity to Susannah Dickey's astute tragicomedy, in which ...
Hero, nemesis, spy or host?What exactly is an alter ego? In this book, 21 contemporary poets give...
Anne Gill tells the story of Raft from the edge of a precipice. Standing on the stormy cliff of a...
Anja Konig's is a voice we need now more than ever. In an era of tribalism, it's rare to encounte...