A review of Flatback Sally Country by Rachel Custer
Compulsive Reader
by Magdalena Ball
3h ago
Using simple language, in a variety of poetic forms, Custer has created a powerful work that called out to me for compassion. I’ve heard Custer read from this collection and now, reading the entire book, I must say there is only one thing that could add to the beauty and impact of the work: performing the complete collection on stage as a choreographed play. Read more ..read more
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A review of Review of Pigeon House by Shilo Niziolek
Compulsive Reader
by Magdalena Ball
2d ago
Niziolek does not play safe with any of her stories; ‘The Fisherman’s Wife’, for example, at first appears like a folkloric tale told many times before, but Niziolek’s vengeful twist provides this tale with a squeeze of lemon. There is something gloriously satisfying and almost palate cleansing in the way Niziolek seeks to subvert her reader’s expectations. Read more ..read more
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A review of Fat Chance by Kent MacCarter
Compulsive Reader
by Magdalena Ball
5d ago
The mingling of an unlikely, extraordinary outcome with ordinary beginnings forces our assumptions into a stark light. This doesn’t only happen semantically. It is also in the conjunction between different types of media, textual, rhythmic and visual – with source texts like newspaper clippings, medical case studies, and historical cast-off images woven into a story that melds chance, proximity, and banality into a cohesive poetics that is unsettling and oddly moving.  Read more ..read more
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A review of The Galloping Horse by Petra White
Compulsive Reader
by Magdalena Ball
1w ago
The Galloping Horse encourages an exploration of complex emotions and experiences, offering a way to process the more challenging aspects of life with a deep authenticity combined with skilful use of language and the ability to resonate with the reader on a deep level especially with melancholic subject matter.  Read more ..read more
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A review of Turn Up The Heat by Ruth Danon
Compulsive Reader
by Magdalena Ball
1w ago
Her writing appears to be straight forward. The language can be ordinary. It is simple in the best possible meaning of that word. Then, one reads more slowly or reads a lot in one sitting and finds one’s self looking for that other poem, Read more ..read more
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An interview with Ruth Danon
Compulsive Reader
by Magdalena Ball
1w ago
The author of Turn Up The Heat talks about her latest book, about becoming a poet and the nature of poetry, the relationship between form and content, her style, the subject-object relationship, rhythm and musicality, voice, on doing readings, and lots more. Read more ..read more
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The Hand of Fate: A review of Unbound by Sinead McGuigan
Compulsive Reader
by Magdalena Ball
1w ago
A place of oceans and mountains, rivers and dreams, myths and a reality that references the nightmare of history and celebrates the wonder of being. Unbound takes readers on a journey. A journey of the self affirms the value of all selves—this journey, going from one place to another. The poems wander; they look in, they reach out. Read more ..read more
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A review of Indecent Hours by James Fujinami Moore
Compulsive Reader
by Magdalena Ball
1w ago
Indecent Hours, James Fujinami Moore’s inaugural volume of verse, makes me glad I occasionally have the decency to break bad habits. What provides Indecent Hours its thematic coherence are the specters of cruelty that haunt its pages, the major and minor traumas Moore documents with an economy of words as refined as it is brutal.   Read more ..read more
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A review of What Start a Bad Mornin’ by Carol Mitchell
Compulsive Reader
by Magdalena Ball
2w ago
Ms Mitchell can take the lives of her characters forward, but to solve the mystery of Amaya’s past, Amaya must go into the past. That is why she recounts what happened as though it is happening. Again. Time is the biggest mystery. The stories are about Amaya Lin in particular, but Time and memory include everything. Even when you think you have forgotten, that lost time is still alive in you. I have already read it twice.           Read more ..read more
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A review of Passenger by Cormac McCarthy
Compulsive Reader
by Magdalena Ball
2w ago
In the interest of full disclosure (and how seldom we hear of disclosure that is not full), I didn't like the authorial voice of The Passenger from the first page. But we'll come to Alicia and her troubles later. To continue with the discussion of signifiers, here we have an author steeped in Americana: the American story, as understood by America, and the cultural signifiers best known by Americans. Read more ..read more
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