Yes Life: Dominic Berry, Flapjack Press

Manchester-based performance poet Dominic Berry has twice been voted best spoken word artist in the Saboteur awards. The affirmative title Yes Life gives a major clue to the uplifting content of most of his latest collection. But it isn’t the whole story; there are also poems about other, less happy aspects of the world out there.

The first section, ‘Fantasy’, includes ‘The Crying Café’, where ...

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'It's me, she said. It was the physio': Michael Rosen recounts his Covid ordeal, step by step, in new collection

In early March 2020 the poet Michael Rosen was doing what he normally did, making school visits, socialising. Then Covid struck him down, and nearly killed him. He spent three months in hospital, of which nearly seven weeks were in an induced coma. In his new book of poetry about his long road to re...

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Review

The Ghostly Effect: Paul Surman, Dempsey & Windle

Oxford-based poet Paul Surman’s first collection, Places (Oversteps Books) was published in 2018. A further collection, Seasons of Damage and Beauty (Dempsey & Windle) followed in 2021. He is a member...

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The Taking Part: Joe Williams, Maytree Press

This short collection by Joe Williams comes with an evocative cover image by Walker Scott. In a Lowryesque scene in a back street a hunched figure passes by while two youngsters play football, the goa...

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Bless the Daughter Raised by a Voice in her Head: Warsan Shire, Chatto & Windus

Warsan Shire’s first full collection captivates the reader with the precision and pressing rhythm of her lines that reflect the urgency of her message. Shire is a Somali-British poet who was born in N...

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Reinforcements! Yorkshire contingent joins Words on the Wall

You might be forgiven in February for shivering at the thought of Northumberland’s Words on the Wall, given Hexham’s setting, close to the evocative Hadrian’s Wall. Cold, bleak, inhospitable? Not a bi...

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Resurrection of a Black Man: Jenny Mitchell, Indigo Dreams

Jenny Mitchell’s impressive and award-winning two previous collections – both reviewed by Write Out Loud – were largely about Britain’s involvement in slavery, and its pain, misery and legacy as seen ...

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Review

Bless the Daughter Raised by a Voice in her Head: Warsan Shire, Chatto & Windus

Warsan Shire’s first full collection captivates the reader with the precision and pressing rhythm of her lines that reflect the urgency of her message. Shire is a Somali-British poet who was born in N...

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Review

For those in peril ... a heady brew of music, poetry and beer

Music and poetry is generally a good mix. Add beer, history, and stirring tales of lifeboats, and you have all the ingredients for a heady brew. And so it proved at Newcastle’s Biscuit Factory art gal...

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Review

Taking the last bus home after nights like these! Brian Bilston wows big audience at the New Poetry Shack in London

The hugely popular “poet laureate of Twitter” Brian Bilston has always been somewhat of a mystery man, keen to obscure his true identity and limiting his public appearances. He does seem to be getting...

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Review

Second Glance: Ron Scowcroft, Oversteps Books

Ron Scowcroft lives in Lancaster. His pamphlet Moon Garden was published by Wayleave Press in 2014 and his full collection Second Glance by Oversteps Books in 2022. A number of poems in the latter hav...

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Review

Workwear: Carla Scarano D'Antonio, The High Window Press

There is much to admire and enjoy in Workwear. Carla Scarano D’Antonio’s clarity of vision, disarming directness and artist’s eye for detail take us on a journey in which portraiture, domesticity and ...

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Review

Poet of the borderlands: uncovering the riches of Northumberland with Noel Hodgson

To Horncliffe, the most northerly village in England, on the southern side of the river Tweed, for a poetry reading. It is what the Scots call a dreich day, cold and wet. Well, it is January. But the ...

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