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  • av Rab Ferguson
    139,-

  • av Luca M Damiani
    168,-

  • av Hongwei Bao
    168,-

  • av Angela Topping
    187,-

  • av Sarah Watkinson
    187,-

  • av Nancy Anne Miller
    143,-

    In Queen Palm, internationally-published poet Nancy Anne Miller takes readers on a captivating journey into the rich iconography and metaphors of the Christmas season. Through four distinct sections, Miller explores the unique blend of African/English influences found in Bermudian customs, the vibrant and sometimes extravagant American celebrations, the symbolism of Advent, and the poet's personal creative process. The book concludes with a thought-provoking selection of Biblically-inspired poems.While delving into the exploration of language and imagery, the poems also carry a spiritual undertone, inviting readers to embark on both a poetic inquiry and a sacred quest. Queen Palm celebrates the power of Christmas as a transformative and introspective time, where the boundaries of poetry and spirituality merge seamlessly.

  • av Joseph McKinnon
    145,-

  • av Will Kemp
    195,-

  • av Ilaria Boffa
    195,-

    Beginnings & Other Tragedies is a powerful book-length poem, offering a choral experience of a present-future where almost all hope seems lost - except for that offered by poetry itself, and the "beginners" who care about our planet and dream of making a change. In the background, the landscape of Venice, the sinking city.Drawing on nature poetry, dystopian fiction and Greek tragedy, Ilaria Boffa reimagines scientific and ecological language as sites of beauty, with the power to change reality; seen here as something malleable and unstable, to be made and remade. Published in a bilingual English/Italian edition, with both texts written by the original poet, readers are offered a rare opportunity to compare the two languages at their absolute best.Through confronting the most painful, discomforting parts of the world and ourselves, Boffa reminds us why "it's good to think difficult things", and why it may be time to repurpose ourselves and start again - a call-to-action which murmurs in our ears both as we read and long after we set the book down.

  • av Catherine Cole
    220,-

    A beautifully-woven memoir that captures the essence of growing up as the child of 'Ten Pound Poms' in Australia.

  • av Simon Maddrell
    131,-

  • av Emma Brankin
    155,-

    Some stories will do anything to get your attention...

  • av Thomas Legendre
    143,-

    Amanda Nigh has finally hit her stride. Working at HocusLocus, she recrafts digital content with viral potential while beta-testing radical new software and enjoying London nightlife. But then she discovers a strange story involving Craig Merleau, an American ice hockey player who talks like a European philosopher, inexplicably propelling his team to victory with his cerebral pronouncements.As she is drawn into his philosophical and physical orbit, the world is threatened by a subatomic virus that affects computers and humans in bizarre ways. While the global networks run amok and everyone struggles with quantum superposition and gravity quakes, two people remain blissfully untouched: Amanda and Craig.As Amanda enlists Craig to avert technological and biological Armageddon, she faces a disturbing question: is the end really Amanda Nigh?

  • av Susan Furber
    195,-

    Twenty-three-year-old Lillie Carrigan has left behind the America of her childhood to study at Oxford, dismissing her past as she tries to write and become a woman. In the autumn of 1946, she meets a man over whiskey and cigarettes at Balliol College - a man who will become her husband. Over the course of five years, Lillie travels from England to Paris, the Côte d'Azur, New York City and the Hamptons, her marriage unravelling along the way but her memories remaining steadfast as her uninvited yet constant companions. Haunted by past tragedies and scarred by fresh misadventures, Lillie once again shares her story and lays bare her sins.'An intimate character study and honest portrait of a marriage, this sequel, with its eloquent prose and sharp dialogue, does not disappoint.' - J.M. Monaco, author of How We Remember 'A forensic portrait of post-war marriage. In prose that never drops a stitch, Susan Furber has delivered another triumph in this insightful, moving and utterly compelling novel.' - Christine Dwyer Hickey, 2020 Walter Scott Prize winner'We Were Very Merry tells the story of a modern marriage in which no one is at fault since no one appears to have done anything wrong. The attempts to make one's self intelligible to another reveal the grief and regret inherent in the past, and despite a well-earned resolution, the exorbitant price of perception.' - Susanna Moore, author of In the Cut

  •  
    133,-

    Narratives of the body are versatile ¿ and From the Body demonstrates this.Here, there are confessions, recollections, and love letters, all dealing with topics as wide-reaching as eating disorders, disability, and gender dysphoria. In this collection of personal essays and creative nonfiction, its contributors have responded to food and the body in intimate but universal ways, sharing experiences that will resonate with readers.Featuring the award-winning poet Andrew McMillan and dedicated mental health campaigner Cara Lisette, From the Body is a tender and honest discussion of how we feed and fuel our bodies ¿ and how we may, in time, come to treat them a little kinder.

  • av Neil Rathmell
    195,-

    "One eveningwhen they are sitting quietly togethershe breaks the silenceand starts to talk"Dorothy tells the complete story of a Yorkshire woman, in verse, from her birth early in the last century to her death in the first years of this. Like so many of her generation, she lived a life both ordinary and extraordinary; shaded by grief, troubled by family dynamics, and restricted by the realities of class, location and gender. Hers was a life where survival itself, the simple act of continuing, was a victory to be celebrated - but one where the reminders of why we continue, the blinding moments of sunshine when the clouds part, were that much sweeter because of it.Tender and insightful, harrowing and uplifting, Dorothy is a stunning act of empathy from a son towards his mother. Her story, told through the author's assured, unpretentious verse, is both specific and universal enough to resonate with all who encounter it; to challenge some, heal others, and leave a lasting impression on the world Dorothy came to love.

  • av Amy Boyle
    195,-

  • av Matt Riker
    173,-

    With his first collection, Matt Riker takes us on a journey where we cannot be sure if we're awake or dreaming - if what we perceive is real or imagined. Circling love and family, nature and society, science and mythology, these poems bring both the surprising and the miraculous into sharp focus. But like words, all things are subject to change - some are lost, others gained. Riker looks inwards and outwards, to distant places and times, to the essence of consciousness. In poems both personal and philosophical, the intimate and the cerebral are entwined with the richness and ambiguity of existence.

  • av John Killick
    139,-

    Inside is a book that lives and breathes in its confinement.It places a brief account of the patients of a hospital assessment ward (catering to those in the process of being diagnosed with dementia) in contrast to the inmates of a broad spectrum of prisons.Holding these strands together is the voice of a single poet who doesn¿t hold back from telling it as it is.In sharply observed and pointed language, the whole carries a message for politicians and the public alike.

  • av Jeffrey Loffman
    167,-

  • av Emma Must
    175,-

    Longlisted for the 2023 Laurel Prize and Highly Commended in the 2023 Forward PrizesIn 1992, a group of young people began to protest against the extension of the M3 motorway through Twyford Down outside Winchester - a new road that would, by the hands of the Conservative government, cut seven minutes off the journey time between London and Southampton, whilst carving through the chalk hill in one of England's 'protected' Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The Dongas Tribe, as they would later be known, named after the Matabele word for 'gully', radically altered the UK environmental movement, lauded by the Guardian as having 'kickstarted a major shift in green attitudes in both government and the public.' Twyford Down became a symbol for a further 1,000 protected heritage sites across the UK which were planned to undergo the same process, removing idiosyncrasy from the landscape and presenting an ideal for a country based on mobility and so-called 'progress'. Emma Must was awarded the Goldman Environmental Prize for her efforts towards land protection, including a period of detention in Holloway Prison as one of the 'Twyford Seven'. Must's searing collection, published 30 years after the Twyford protests, considers the role that language plays as witness to our actions on Earth. These powerful, moving and honest depictions of the Twyford protests explore the ways in which language reaches us, saves us, and fails to convince us. Here, the land reveals its histories to the reader, whilst protest actions entwine themselves around judicial statements, teetering between the active and passive voice, the human and non-human.* * *Royalties from each sale of this book will be donated to Transport Action Network and the A36/A350 Corridor Alliance.

  • av Amanda Craven
    195,-

  • av Belinda Bradley
    173,-

  • av Lydia Fulleylove
    167,-

  • av Amanda Huggins
    175,-

  • av Kalman Dean-Richards
    181,-

  • av Robert John Newlands
    167,-

  • av Frances Sackett
    195,-

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