POETRY MONTH: 81 Austerities by Sam Riviere
objectively brilliant, yes, but not not not so good for me?
objectively brilliant, yes, but not not not so good for me?
“People eat what they can. They love what can love them back.”
Today we’re (I’m) looking at another poetry magazine. I’m not quite sure if this one is a magazine or ifContinue Reading
is “art writing” poetry? / is “poetry” art writing?
some old vids of *your* favourite mentally ill poet-blogger
some great love poetry surrounded by trepidatious discussion of someone else’s illness
realising i read poetry looking for poets, not poems
latest chapbook from one of my favourite writers
you been doing all this dope [blogging] / You ain’t had a chance to show ’em what time it is
a masterpiece of contemporary sonnetteering
a gorgeous chapbook kicks off POETRY MONTH
exclusive look at a new poetry film by scott manley hadley!
a middle class british heterosexual Howl
Alan Burns’ underwhelming follow-up to Europe After The Rain
the limits + importance of language (cw: suicide ideation)
an excellent novel (& a guest cat in the pic!!!)
lessing’s children of violence continues to be excellent unlike my mood
brief comments on a perfect novel
a failure of intent
pacy thriller; terrible bookstore; hot summer heat
slow fiction with relentless structure
“the classic coming of age novel… for women”
great essay on the end of the world in film & lit
two new books from Jarett Kobek about CRIME CRIME CRIME
a big book about mushrooms that are magic (not magic mushrooms)
an excellent – near flawless – novel
james baldwin is great; vaccines are also great
my domestic holiday begins with unexpected news; Lawrence eviscerates Xianity
a week off work begins with a great contemporary novel
an excellent novel; in footnotes my concluding thoughts on the TV series The Affair
read some terrible books that failed to distract me from anything
if u see a dead racoon at the side of the road
re-reading Joan Didion for the first time in my life
powerful academic text on the impossibility of decolonisation within capitalistic structures
on ian flemming, jackie kerouac, karlo knausgaard
very “literary fiction” literary fiction about WW2 non-Nazi racism
I’ve been ignoring my depressive relapse by studying AIDS
rooney rooney
some inevitably biased hagiography
a lovely fucking novel
when did a white man last write a GREAT novel?
an underwhelming but important read
a big novel that’s surprisingly worthwhile
a little bit of Vitamin D…
three split narratives, one of which confused me…
accidentally read a book by a nazi
David Foster Wallace was a prick.


















































