Multi-award-winning poet Capildeo's new collection brings home the delight, frustration, restlessness and continuity of striving to live a connected human life in our fragmenting times.
The January-February 2024 issue of PN Review, one of the most outstanding poetry journals of our time.
This is a short, powerful novel dealing with the complicities and accomodations of power within Italian politics.
Chris Wallace-Crabbe, one of Australia's best-loved poets, writes in Rondo a book that distils his life-long themes of nature, time and love; he is civilised but also relentless in his dedication to 'troubling the stubborn world for meaning'.
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.
Library Lives: A Constellation of Books and Objects from the Rylands plots the lifelong love affair between one particular book worm and the John Rylands Library and its collections in Manchester.