Her Other Language: Wendy French gets to grips with a bold and frank anthology addressing domestic violence
politics
The Ugly Side of Beauty. Connie Woodring discusses the downside of our beauty culture as it relates to women’s physical/mental health and safety.
Social Solidarity and the Arts in Woke Times: Michael Crowley advocates against an ever-increasing subdivision of the arts into racial, age-related or gender groups for a similar audience
David Mitchell reviews A History of Water in the Middle East at the Jerwood Theatre Upstairs at the Royal Court
Stuart Henson wonders about the title but in other respects finds that the sharp-pointed humour in Ian McMillan’s new chapbook penetrates most of its targets.
Stuart Henson recommends a budgie’s-eye view of Brexit as set down by John Gohorry
At the end of part one of this article, we saw the arrival of Nellie Cressall on the Isle of Dogs.
Neil Curry indulges in a brief speculation on a recent parallel to a historical moment in the 17th century
Although Jon Bloomfield intended “Our City” for a general audience, I think some of our elected representatives could learn a lot from it.
In 1962 The Westinghouse Corporation made a documentary film exploring the state of the nation as Britain continued to register the aftershocks of war, adjusted to the loss of empire and witnessed the erosion of its status as a world-class industrial nation.
Poetry review – The Sailors of Ulm: Neil Fulwood marvels that the bizarre workings of Andy Croft’s imagination can be contained within such well-crafted formalism
By Michael Bartholomew-Biggs • books, poetry reviews, politics, year 2020 0 • Tags: books, Neil Fulwood, poetry, politics