A panoramic view of English life from 1919 to 1936, Two Thousand Million Man-Power is no wistful, nostalgic account of this time. Instead, Gertrude Trevelyan shows how... Læs mere
An anthology of reviews produced in collaboration with special educational needs children studying at Hewett Academy, Norwich UK.
2021/22 collection of UEA Creative Writing Society pieces.
The 2022 collection of creative writing from Durham University
A selection of short stories by Thomas Vaiseta published in pamphlet form as part of the KUNAI (meaning: 'bodies') series and translated from Lithuanian by Jeremy Hill. From the people who brought you KESHIKI and YEOYU.
A selection of short stories by Jurga Tumasonyte published in pamphlet form as part of the KUNAI (meaning: 'bodies') series and translated from Lithuanian by Sasha Wilde. From the people who brought you KESHIKI and YEOYU.
A selection of short stories by Virginija Kulvinskaite published in pamphlet form as part of the KUNAI (meaning: 'bodies') series and translated from Lithuanian by Julija Gulbinovic. From the people who brought you KESHIKI and YEOYU.
Todd, Randy, and Carter come across a boy while roaming the countryside near their town. They take him hostage in a cave in an abandoned quarry and consider what to do next. Written in cool, realistic prose, Quarry pulls the reader into a vortex of violence and inhumanity.
A special issue of Hinterland, the quarterly nonfiction journal based out of the University of East Anglia, containing brand-new creative nonfiction themed around "writing the body".
A haunting account of the emotional abuse experienced by a young woman who marries an older man, an extremely tight-fisted grocer whose avarice gradually takes over her whole world view. A powerful story of psychological degradation that draws the reader in like a vortex.
First translation into English of Desesterro, the multiple prize-winning novel by Sheyla Smanioto first published in Brazil, 2015
A masterpiece of humanism, Time Stood Still recounts Paul Cohen-Portheim's years of internment in England as an enemy alien during World War One. A passionate but balanced argument against internment and its inherently dehumanizing effects.