Carl Phillips's Scattered Snows, to the North is a collection about distortion and revelation, about knowing and the unreliability of a knowing that's based on human memory.
This is Gabriel Josipovici's most melodramatic and enigmatic fiction to date, as though one of Magritte's paintings had come to life to the rhythms of a Bach partita.
Beverley Bie Brahic's Apple Thieves delights in the pleasures of nature, art and the body.
The May-June 2024 issue of PN Review, one of the most outstanding poetry journals of our time.
The March-April 2024 issue of PN Review, one of the most outstanding poetry journals of our time.
Conjurors presents this poet's best work, much of it for the first time.
These short poems, considered as Iraqi haiku, reflect an urgent wisdom beyond their original borders.
Toutoungi's third collection is a tragi-comic journal of grief that, out of the chaos of bereavement, her failing eyesight and eco-stress, blends poems of startling wit and hard-won joy.
A sequel to Dante's Inferno (Carcanet, 2014), where Dante was relocated to the University of Essex, here the action shifts from Dante's island of Purgatory to Mersea Island in Essex.
This collection of 200 tankas has no Great Purpose, apart from explaining the Meaning of Life. In an firework-display of 31-syllable sparkles, probably set off by accident, it lights up any corner of things done, thought, felt, seen, suffered & enjoyed that it pleases.
A selected poems in translation by one of Mexico's leading poets, taken from five collections of verse across five decades, addressing issues of migration, duality, language loss and the mutability of identity.
The poems in One Little Room enter and explore confined spaces in history and personal memory.