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Winter’s Bone dir. Debra Granik



September 18th, 2010 posted by Ian Pople

This wonderful film is held together by a mesmerising central performance from Jennifer Lawrence and immaculate direction by Debra Granik.

The story is well-known by now. Lawrence as Ree Dolly is the seventeen-year old who holds her family together. Her mother is a catatonic depressive, and Ree has two younger siblings, Sonny, her [...]

Reviewed by Edmund Prestwich
 In his Introduction to this volume, Harish Trivedi says that Kunwar Narain is probably the most highly regarded Hindi poet alive today. Both Trivedi and Apurva Narain emphasise how deeply the poet has read Indian literature from its Sanskrit roots to now. As an outsider to Indian culture I’m not in a [...]

Reviewed by Edmund Prestwich
 
In her Translator’s Preface, Tiina Aleman explains how closely she and Doris Kareva worked on the poems in this volume. Kareva herself is a well-regarded translator who has translated widely from English into Estonian, so I assume these versions achieve a high level of fidelity to the originals. They certainly read [...]

Like Eliot’s Webster, Roy Fisher is much possessed by death.  However, it’s not the skull beneath the skin he sees; it is the relationship we have with the dead in the transition of dying; what he elsewhere calls the ‘pass and return valve’ of death, and the ‘life of the dead’.   This relationship is  a [...]

Michael Haslam A Cure for Woodness Arc Publications



June 14th, 2010 posted by Ian Pople

Michael Haslam’s writing is an eerie combination of late High Modernism of the Bunting and David Jones kind, and an unswerving allegiance to the poetics of the ‘Cambridge Axis’ of Prynne, Crozier and the Rileys.  Like the Bunting and David Jones, Haslam reaches back through Modernism to the alliterative foundations of Early English verse, and [...]

Bobby McFerrin Vocabularies Wrasse Records



June 14th, 2010 posted by Ian Pople

Bobby McFerrin’s new disc is a complete revamp of a capella in jazz, dragging it away from the finger clicking parodies of the Swingle Singers, via Manhattan Transfer into something edgier, larger and more contemporary.  McFerrin is universally known for Don’t Worry Be Happy and, occasionally, for his version of McCartney’s ‘Blackbird’.  But since those [...]

Where the God of Love Hangs Out, Amy Bloom



May 14th, 2010 posted by Robert Mitchell

         So where does the God of Love hang out? Apparently in the company of middle class intellectuals, heartbroken widows, middle aged adulterers, devoted mothers and alcoholic stepsons with tangled oedipal issues to work out . . .  he hangs out in the motorcars, kitchens and living rooms of Middle America, a local which, for [...]

reviewed by Edmund Prestwich
 
Shanta Acharya was born and educated in India, gained a doctorate from Oxford and was a Visiting Scholar at Harvard. She has written a book on Emerson, three books on asset management, and five volumes of poetry. This new collection reflects both the breadth of cultural reference and the rather privileged perspective [...]

Don Delillo, ‘Point Omega’, Picador



March 26th, 2010 posted by Phil Leeke

Foul deeds will arise ere the earth o’erhelm them to men’s eyes.
 
The perspective in Hamlet seems unlikely to be shared by the main protagonist of DeLillos’s new novel, a ‘desert in the woods’ academic policy wonk grinding out the linguistic and idea upholstery to the neocon ideologues of the former Bush administration. Enhanced interrogation, rendition; [...]

Briggflatts: Basil Bunting, Bloodaxe Books £12.00



June 12th, 2009 posted by Ian Pople

In 1979, Donald Davie wrote that ‘Briggflatts is where English poetry has got to, it is what English poets must assimilate and go on from.’ Why hasn’t that happened?
One reason for the critical occlusion of Bunting is that late-modernism itself can be a bit of a cul-de-sac. On the DVD that accompanies the text, [...]

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