I Imagine Myself Julie O'CallaghanI Imagine Myself is for anyone who has ever imagined they were someone (or something) else. A powerful collection that asserts the freedom to have a visible midlife as a woman, to have difficulties in a relationship and work through them, and to weather the storms of ageing. In ambitious and dynamic poems, I Imagine Myself gives voice to the experience of trying to discover a new self, tracing an arc through illness, middle age, connections to other
while Moroccan poet and literator Mohammed Bennis is featured in an in-depth interview and poetry in translation by Camilo Gomez-Rivas
show children learning to swim as a boy is buried at sea
— Jewish Historical Studies
of Goode’s steely determination to find his place in a society in a state of flux and play music that was both in and out of step with its shifting demographics
Photos from Durham
have documented all the writers mentioned in the diary
for their beauty and tenderness
Aidas Marcenas
"He is that curious mix of guru
her two previous collections
This new collection is a highly-charged literary work-one that engages in dialogues with an array of sources to create a new kind of map of the space that is common to us all
Brar hears Blunt in order to access the long contested dream of Britain’s disappearance that was conducted under the name of Black British Arts