Bemærk: Kan leveres før jul.
Ed Luker's hotly anticipated collection that engages with the loss of life as a result of the migrant crisis in Europe and the world.
Bemærk: Kan leveres før jul.
This collection is an unapologetic reckoning with history, memory, and grief. It explores the intersections of girlhood, identity and selfhood against the backdrop of the Vietnamese diaspora.
Bemærk: Kan leveres før jul.
Co-authored by Bhanu Kapil FRSL and dramaturg Blue Pieta, this work focusses on five performances through a study of shared time and inter-generational healing.
Bemærk: Kan leveres før jul.
The Nightmare Sequence is a searing response to the atrocities in Gaza. Heartbreaking and humane, this is an insightful work that also considers how art is complicit in Empire.
Bemærk: Kan leveres før jul.
Gabrielle Bates’ electrifying debut questions what it means to love another person and how to exorcise childhood fears. This collection wrestles with betrayal, forced obedience, violence and young womanhood.
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
Debut collection of verse by Kat Sinclair
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
Minoli Salgado’s Broken Jaw is a beautifully orchestrated collection of eighteen stories set mainly in Sri Lanka from a writer who has gained international recognition for her evocative representation of the trauma of war.
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
The Wasteland for the 21st Century? In this wild mini-epic poem, Verity Spott takes the reader through an inferno of references and situations, from begging fascists for love to an adapted script from Christopher Nolan's Batman films.
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
An exceptional debut poetry collection by Robert Kiely. Mixing the very best of levity with acerbic and wry political critique.
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
Bemærk: Kan ikke leveres før jul.
James Goodwin is a poet doing a PhD in English and Humanities at Birkbeck, University of London with a thesis on the blacksociopoetics of marronage, breath, sacrality and emanation.
Bemærk: Kan leveres før jul.
These poems’ meditative transformations engage with South Asian experiences of addiction, domestic violence, and mental illness, refusing to ignore narratives treated as unspeakable and overlooked by the English canon.