Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker utgitt av Out-Spoken Press

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  • av Rojbin Arjen Yigit
    116,-

    Set in the beating heart of Family, Rojbin Arjen Yigit's poems are both a questioning of the past and a mirror searching for future possibilities. Grappling with loss, the futility of language and the distances of countries, these poems are an accumulation of the speaker's struggles and senses. Interconnecting locales across generations, they set out what it means to belong and what it means to mean.

  • av Juana Adcock
    155,-

    I Sugar The Bones explores the crossing of borders between countries, people, languages, and the veil between life and death. Through the porosity of the US/Mexico border or through toxic relationships, through geopolitical violence or Freudian slippages, through ghostly glitches, translingualism and radio signal interferences, or the role of rivers across history, Adcock invests in the liminal spaces and layering of different realities. Through deceptively simple language, humour and a multi-layered lens through unexpected transpositions, the poet embraces the dubbing actors who once voiced the characters of The Simpsons for Latin America, along with a man imagined as a kitchen cabinet. Adcock interrogates the different stories surrounding borders, where things are a lot more interconnected than we tend to assume.

  • av Rebecca McCutcheon
    155,-

    Debut poetry collection by Rebecca McCutcheon.

  • av Jay Gao
    116,-

    Poetry pamphlet by Jay Gao, whose debut poetry collection Imperium (Carcanet Press, UK, 2022) is a winner of the Michael Murphy Memorial Prize, an Eric Gregory Award and a Somerset Maugham Award.

  • av Azad Ashim Sharma
    170,-

    Debut poetry collection by Azad Sharma, exploring drug addiction, relapse and recovery.

  • av Fran Lock
    195,-

    Lyric essays by Fran Lock on subject of the Feral in context of queer, Irish, Gypsy Romani Traveler, working class people and women.

  •  
    195,-

    Essay poetry epistolary anthology. East and South-East Asian poets edited by Jennifer Wong & Eddie Tay. Contributors inc: Pulitzer-shortlisted Arthur Sze, Marilyn Chin, Li-Young Lee, Guggenheim Fellow Victoria Chang, Costa Book Award winner Mary Jean Chan, Forward Prize winner Will Harris and National Poetry Competition 2021 winner Eric Yip.

  • av Alex Marlow
    116,-

    Debut poetry pamphlet by Alex Marlow, a British poet and actor from Lancashire. His work has appeared in the Rialto, The London Magazine, Ambit, fourteen poems, and Impossible Archetype. He is a 2022 beneficiary of The Fenton Arts Trust.

  • av Hibaq Osman
    87,-

  • av Bridget Minamore
    87,-

  • av Natalie Shapero
    145,-

    New pamphlet by Natalie Shapero. Natalie Shapero is author of poetry collections POPULAR LONGING, HARD CHILD, shortlisted for the International Griffin Poetry Prize, and NO OBJECT, winner of the Great Lakes College Association New Writers Award.

  • av Oakley Flanagan
    145,-

    Debut pamphlet by non-binary poet Oakley Flanagan. Oakley is an alum of Roundhouse Poetry Collective, The London Library Emerging Writers Programme, The Genesis Jewish Book Week Emerging Writers' Programme and Southbank New Poets Collective. They are were a winner of the ruth weiss Emerging Poet Award 2022.

  • av William Gee
    145,-

    Poetry pamphlet by William Gee exploring themes of chronic illness

  • av Mukahang Limbu
    126,-

  • av Helen Quah
    110,-

    Debut poetry pamphlet by Helen Quah

  • av Sarah Fletcher
    140,-

    Poetry pamphlet. Associative, sensuous, and unstable, Caviar explores the line between decadence and depravity. In Fletcher's third pamphlet, investigations of power and violence are no longer limited to the domestic and romantic. She interrogates all dark spheres of influence

  • av Alice Frecknall
    165,-

    An examination of solitude and absence, poems grappling with thereality and taboo of loneliness pitted against an anxiety of connecting. Exploring humanrelationships, breakdown in communication, and silence. Frecknall's leaps of surreality, extreme empathyand vivid imagery make Somewhere Something is Burning a compelling joyride of a read.

  • av laura jane lee
    126,-

    poetry pamphlet

  • av Adam Kammerling
    154,-

    Debut poetry collection by award-winning poet, MC and theatre maker, Adam Kammerling. He has written poetry commissions for the BBC, The Orwell Prize and Nationwide. Recent works include Inside!, a piece of poetry/rave theatre commissioned by Centrepoint and the Saatchi Gallery.

  • av Joe Carrick-Varty
    125,-

    Poetry Pamphlet by Joe Carrick-Varty

  • av Wayne Holloway-Smith
    89,-

    Poetry pamphlet of 7 new poems by National Poetry Competition 2018 winner Wayne Holloway-Smith

  • av Arji Manuelpillai
    112,-

    âEURœArji Manuelpillai hits the ground running with this debut and I freaking love it. His poems are funny, irreverent, hugely affecting. HeâEUR(TM)s fidgety, darts moment to moment âEUR" youâEUR(TM)ll rush after him, then suddenly find heâEUR(TM)s stopped, spun on his heel and youâEUR(TM)re face-to-face with his good-natured grin. Manuelpillai will dial up the volume just to whisper something damn beautiful beneath its surface. Every page of Mutton Rolls is tasty, and announces by increment a highly enjoyable new voice.âEUR? âEUR" Wayne Holloway-SmithâEURœThe poems in this brilliant, playful debut are multifarious though gratifyingly interlinked, addressing the subjects of Sri-Lankan British identity, masculinity, friendship, grief and love. The tone is sometimes satirical, but there is no hiding behind satire in Arji ManuelpillaiâEUR(TM)s work âEUR" great tenderness and beauty characterise these poems, and the poetâEUR(TM)s voice is completely original, entirely his own.âEUR? âEUR" Hannah Lowe

  • av Fran Lock
    165,-

    Contains Mild Peril is a book permeated by anxiety, not fatal threat, but the ambient manic hum of daily life. Precarity does something to us at the level of language; it shapes the ways we see and say. Our current climate ‿ political, environmental, economic ‿ engenders its own nervy music. These poems channel this collective apprehension in ways both deeply personal and instantly familiar. It is a collection that abounds in loss, in a sense of being lost, and in the gnawing fear of losing, yet its speakers address us with urgency. This is language in the throes of fighting back.

  • av Richard Georges
    154,-

    Set in the immediate aftermath of the most catastrophic storm to strike the British Virgin Islands Epiphaneia grapples with loss, trauma, and the resilience of the human spirit. The reader may not find certainty, but they will find wonder, gratitude, and joy amidst the devastation.

  • av Joelle Taylor
    185,-

    Songs My Enemy Taught Me is a collection of back alley poetry and flick knife tales detailing women's struggle against sexual terrorism and colonisation. Songs of independence. Songs of survival. Songs of uprising. Comprised of poetry, text messages, landays, letters and news flashes these are stories plucked from women's lips across the globe and re-imagined by award-winning poet, playwright, and author Joelle Taylor. Some stories are her own. Others are yours.

  • - An Anthology of Emerging BAME Poets
     
    145,-

    Nascent platforms four cutting edge emerging BAME voices in UK contemporary poetry. Poems of migration, family, class, faith and homeland intersect with those of the body and gender identity to create a complex 21st century poetic. Cinematic, rich and vital.

  • - Poetry & the Spoken Word Renaissance
    av Pete Bearder
    161,-

    Pete "the Temp" Bearder presents the unwritten history, science and skill of spoken word. Stage Invasion answers some strangely unaddressed questions: This groundbreaking book explores a thriving ecology of artistry, and how it can serve us for cultural, social and political renewal.

  • av Hannah Lowe
    99,-

    What is a neighbour? What makes a community? In this themed collection, Hannah Lowe focuses on a small urban district, and finds a rich complexity of neighbourliness under extreme pressure. Nowhere is more at stake than the circle of home the author draws around her infant son, who must learn the fragile meanings of the neighbourhood.

  • - Giovanni Quessep
     
    195,-

    A Greek Verse for Ophelia and Other Poems contains one hundred poems taken from renowned Colombian poet Giovanni Quessep's entire oeuvre, including his last published book of poetry, Abyss Unveiled. The poems contained have been selected by his translators Felipe Botero Quintana, Ranald Barnico and the poet himself.

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