Margaret Wilmot writes like a true citizen of the world. She is as at home in the nine-partsequen...
Martin Zarrop's Is Anyone There? offers the reader witty and accessible poems, which often look b...
'James W. Wood is a talent to be reckoned with: both lyrical and humane, he has a technical abili...
'In 'West South North, North South East', Daniel Bennett envisages landscapes of decay; urban Bri...
Anthony Howell is a poet and novelist whose first collection of poems, Inside the Castle was brou...
A welcome full first collection from Alison Mace. Poems about family relationships, and by implic...
Michael Lesher's Surfaces is a celebration of what might be called the central paradox of poetry:...
'Alice Allen spent her formative years in Jersey, and her poems are imbued with its landscape, la...
...by the second poem her changelings were creeping under my skin. A quiet horror permeates the c...
True poetry has the intellectual and formal rigour to tell us stories of the way we live. In Tim ...
Alan Price's latest collection, The Trio Confessions, demonstrates once again his remarkably sens...
With passion and immense technical control, Wendy Klein's Out of the Blue takes us from the Cuba ...