This book attempts to do something lasting with the dross of our daily lives: the ephemeral and momentary productions of the media, especially...
FIG is the second installment of the ongoing series Goan Atom. It is a colllection of 12 poetic pieces written between 1996 and 2004. They have each...
Earn Your Milk contains all the uncollected prose works of Tom Raworth, gathering together "Letters from...
"The Sophist" was first published by Sun & Moon Press in 1987 and has been unavailable for well over a decade. A pivotal book for...
This is a collection of stories about the altering landscape of the mind and the landscape of place. The stories are set in diverse locations,...
With grit and humour Zeppelins takes on the speed and surrealist chaos of the metropolis at the beginning of the 21st century. A sequence of sonnets...
These prize-winning stories deal with life, love, loneliness, delusion, misunderstanding, death. An office worker wakes...
Space travel likened to a dream, pursued refugees, bikes ‘ridden in a free-form dance with cars’, Olympian exertion, and a crime whose...
Mark Waldron’s debut collection The Brand New Dark is a book about sex, eyes, eggs, dogs, death and sausages. It is a book concerned with our...
Alison Croggon's bold new collection, Theatre, uses a range of narratives, fables, monologues and compressed lyrics to examine female identity and...
Goose Music is a collection of new poems co-authored by Andy Brown and John Burnside, two writers with backgrounds in ecology and notable for their...
Unanimous Night is the second full-length collection from Tokyo-based poet Michael Brennan. Unanimous Night is an elegy affirming experience, the...
Ghost & Other Sonnets will disturb and delight. Divided into three sections the sequence begins with the Ghost Sonnets. Using traditional ghost...
Set in the crumbling ruins of Yugoslavia, this book presents a vision of the Balkans that flinches from neither brutality nor beauty but honours...
Reading Julia Bird's debut collection is like sorting out the contents of an up-ended jewellery box. Crafted formal poems tangle with the rhinestone...
Best British Short Stories invites you to judge a book by its cover – or more accurately, by its title. This new...
The Best British Poetry 2011 presents the finest and most engaging poems found in British-based literary magazines and webzines over the past year....
Michael Murphy (red.) og Kenneth Allott
Kenneth Allott was born in Glamorgan and educated in Newcastle and Oxford. Widely regarded as one of the most promising poets of the late Thirties,...
Stretching from Anglo-Saxon fragments, through the Shakespeare of Midsummer Night’s Dream, the ecstatic lyrics of John Clare, elegiac...
This revised first volume of Selected Writings by Richard Burns consists of longer poems written between 1965 and 2000, in Greece, Italy, England and...
Set in the crumbling ruins of Yugoslavia, In a Time of Drought condemns war, destruction and dictatorship and invokes fertility, nurture and peace....
The action of this book-length poem unfurls in the public and private worlds of corporate man. The Manager is a...
Jane Holland’s third collection, Camper Van Blues, is a book of journeys, both real and imaginary. The title sequence is a British road movie...
What links a café in Antarctica, a factory for producing electronic tracking tags and a casino where gamblers...
Tobias Hill’s first full-length collection, Year of the Dog, won an Eric Gregory award in 1995....
Two people find love through a chance meeting in the streets of Antwerp. An English sea captain is unfaithful in the Guayaquil of 1910. In the south...
Complete Twentieth Century Blues is the definitive edition of a long network of...
I Con: New and Selected Poems represents the best examples of poetry from the career of Tim Thorne, a career spanning over forty years and a dozen...
John Wilkinson’s Down to Earth is his darkest work to date: a disturbing road poem of the American mid-West, an epic of migration, an...
‘Sometimes you read collections that in their ambition and concerns alert the mind to the possibility of obtaining a new perspective on what...
’68: New Stories From Children of the Revolution broadly addresses the theme of revolution, utopia, dystopia and...
This superb selection of Fiona Pitt-Kethley’s much celebrated poetry portrays an unusual life but also celebrates the things that all women,...
When a student was asked to comment on what he had learnt from the Write Lines project his response was ‘the freedom of paper and ink’ we...
There are very few major European poets of the early twentieth century not already known to English-language audiences, but Srečko Kosovel is one....
Brittle Bones expresses vulnerability, an uncertainty leading to things lost (or gained). The book starts with a series of rooms – places to...
Powerful and evocative poems of love, loss, and memory which range from contemporary England to a Scottish childhood, from the State of England to...
The import of sound and music, cultural iconography, and the fine-spun image are pulsing throughout Cherryl Floyd-Miller’s third collection of...
In one of the best debut collections for ages, Katy Evans-Bush rises to the challenge of finding words for our times, meeting them in the nurseries...
Masterful, darkly comic and unputdownably brilliant, this first novel by Catherine Eisner is an instant 21st-century classic. Sister Morphine tackles...
The background to Origins of the Underground is really the story of how British poets became intellectuals. As they retreated from inherited and...