Peter Ualrig Kennedy is excited by Elizabeth Cook’s impressive collection of referential poems, each one new, fresh and alluring.
books
Many years after first reading the classic 1930s novel, Sarah Lawson decided to open the book again and write down her second impressions: Emma Lee considers that this re-appraisal was well worthwhile.
Thomas Ovans admires a poetic memoir by Naomi Foyle which celebrates the life of the Belfast writer and activist Mairtin Crawford
Mining the Motherlode: Brian Docherty finds Jacqueline Saphra to be an entertaining narrator whether or not she is an unreliable one.
The undoubted cleverness in Chrissy Williams’ collection is never merely play but also has purpose, observes D A Prince
Sarah Lawson finds seriousness and humour, the personal and the fanciful in this recent and retrospective selection of Shanta Acharya’s poetry
Alex Josephy finds authentic voices in Deborah Tyler-Bennett’s poems of theatrical nostalgia
Thomas Ovans admires the fluency and versatility on show in Brian Docherty’s most recent collection
D A Prince is surprised and delighted by very substantial first collection from David Cameron
Jeremy Wikeley reviews Rishi Dastidar’s first collection and looks forward to his further poetic development
Peter Daniels finds Andrew Waterman’s chapbook sequence a little too restrained for its own good
Ian McEwen’s unorthodox verse forms also employ some traditional poetic skills
By Michael Bartholomew-Biggs • books, poetry reviews, year 2017 0 • Tags: books, Michael Bartholomew-Biggs, poetry