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  • av Katy Wareham Morris
    141,-

    Moods, reveries, erasures; In Katy Wareham Morris' Violet Existence surprising reflections on gender and sexuality are wrapped in the chaos of real life.

  • av U G Vilagos
    162,-

    The Selected Lyric Poetry of U. G. Világos finally collects portions of his lyrical works. The collection is bold and vibrant, as if written in blood, with a lifetime of strong feeling punched into every poem. A work of genius.

  • av John Greening
    141,-

    John Greening's remarkable Omniscience takes its title from a long playful sequence at the core of this work. Rhetorically stunning, emotionally charged, and meticulously constructed, Omniscience makes perfect, profound sense.

  • av Amber Rollinson
    148,-

    Somewhere, Looking explores human orientation and sense of place in the modern world, often in terms of dislocation. Here, in this spellbinding pamphlet, Amber Rollinson's work exists at the edge of two worlds: poetry and cyanotype.

  • av Connelly Daniel R. Connelly
    162,-

    The stories in The Incontinent of Royy are not stories in the traditional sense. People pass by in Daniel R. Connelly's subversive tales and disappear in each others' rearview mirrors; it's a kind of instant ghosting.

  • av Len Lukowski
    141,-

    The Bare Thing delves into queer desire in an urgent, rough and surprisingly playful fashion. The poems celebrate illicit desire, the male body's vulnerability; transitioning, taking risks and opening the window to an unseen world.

  • av Claire Trevien
    162,-

    Our lady of tyres is an absorbing collection of poetry by Claire Trévien translated into French by Marie Lando. Trévien understands poetry intimately, writing with a clarity of perception, a deep knowledge of beauty and a sprinkling of mysterious stardust. Trévien's poetry is moving, delicate and often darkly humorous. Our lady of tyres reimagines the world a new, as though laid bare and reconstructed, enchanted by little details, full of bottomless wonder.

  • av Rochelle Roberts
    141,-

    Rochelle Roberts' Your Retreating Shadow sees the poet move between the real and the unreal world, watching ghosts 'through a celestial mirror' while flowers of the afterlife sprout 'between the floorboards'.

  • av Dide
    148,-

  • av George Sandifer-Smith
    145,-

    Empty Trains looks at the notion of spaces altering to accommodate changes introduced during the pandemic. While avoiding the pitfalls of Covid poetry, Sandifer-Smith deftly traces the poetics of space into a contemporary setting.

  • av Aimee Le
    162,-

    In Erectric Schlock Aimée Lê asks big questions like: do you really want to live in a world where a Subway sandwich costs $5.99? Tough luck. Invasive technology has made life a living hell and enriched a handful of reptiles.

  • av Sj Fowler
    162,-

    An inimitable and eccentric suite of five long poems in the most aberrant tradition of epic poetry; this sequenced fable grinds human nature through its cousins and throws words like faeces at a confused tourist.

  • av Colin Bancroft
    141,-

    Knife Edge is a pamphlet which explores the psychological fallout in the aftermath of trauma, where the edges between bloodshed and recovery, life and death, are softened.

  • av John Richardson & John Welson
    148,-

    Charting a path of 'hope and conviction through personal adversity' The Dialectical Phoenix is a project that arose from the embers of illness, and soars on a flight of celebration.

  • av Briony Collins
    155,-

    All That Glisters is a series of stories which challenge archetypal portrayals of elderly characters by young writers, exploring issues in a more realistic way, balancing difficult themes with humour and humanity.

  • av J H Prynne
    141,-

  • av Bobby Parker
    169,-

    In Honey Monster Bobby Parker uproots the confessional tradition and plants it on a British council estate. Masochistic, impolite and painfully uncomfortable, Parker writes in first person about his childhood, unafraid to show his scars, revelling in dark moments, as if bringing them to light will bring closure. Parker is a martyr to the page, writing as if nothing mattered more, with electricity in every phrase.

  • av Seanin Hughes
    141,-

    At its core She, Shapeshifter considers big themes such as mental health, trauma, death and whether we allow ourselves a chance to grow through pain

  • av Matthew Kosinski
    141,-

    Your Human Shape is a restlessly inventive pamphlet about pleasure, attraction, ecstasy and exorcism where Kosinski developing new paradigms and ways of writing which push at the boundaries of form and language.

  • av Samuel Tongue
    141,-

    Samuel Tongue explores the troubled marriage between sexuality and religion, ecology's slow erasure from a planet in decline and the hybridity of life and death, in a beautiful world ravaged by ugly gods.

  • av David Spittle
    162,-

    Rubbles is a swirling, errant and wild collection by David Spittle which echoes Prynne in its linguistic complexity and use of rhetorical flourishes as a critique of popular culture.

  • av Fiona Larkin
    145,-

    A lyrical, disquieting, and deeply moving collection, Vital Capacity is not just a collection of poems it is a way of looking at the world through the fragile filter of the lung.

  • av Dean Rhetoric
    148,-

  • av Aaron Kent
    155,-

    The Rise Of... Aaron Kent sees the working class Cornish poet writing with no filter, gnarly and mania driven hallucinations that tear into a traumatic incident in compelling fashion. The loosely punctuated long poem follows a wayward adolescent who begins by writing love letters to men he doesn't like and ends up evoking Dylan Thomas' mesmeric 'A refusal to morn...' before turning into the ocean. 'The Rise of' is essential reading, because as Kent knows 'After the first death, there is no other'

  • av Sam Quill
    145,-

    Hey Ho The White Swan By God I Am Thy Man is a culturally rich, beautifully furnished suite of poetry which recalls grand literary eccentrics like Beckett, Joyce and Gertrude Stein. Through classical scenes and moments of devilish intensity, Sam Quill writes with rare elegance and grace, in expectation of 'the plants his ashes sow in heaven.' A beguiling, often dazzling, first collection.

  • av Trevor Ketner
    155,-

  • av John Osborne
    145,-

    My Car Plays Tapes is a tale of captivating storytelling, focusing on John Osborne's life as a support worker and a nostalgic look at what happens when you listen to old tapes from the 1990s.

  • av Chris Neilan
    176,-

    In Stellify, stories of love, abuse, and the film industry weave and intertwine in fragments, like an Altman montage, or Lydia Davis flash that coalesces into a Jennifer Egan-style interlinked narrative.

  • - The Michael Marks International Greek Bicentennial Poetry Prizes Pamphlet
    av Fiona Benson
    148,-

  • av E P Jenkins
    145,-

    Rituals by E. P. Jenkins is an inquisitive and exploratory collection, adventurous in form and setting, it includes photographs, blue and black sketches and a variety of incantations, spells and hexes. Rituals is focused on the feminist occult and is full of intriguing and delightful poetry, brimming with the magic of witchcraft. An impressive, dynamic debut that pushes the possibilities of poetry into new and enchanting places.

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