PAUL DONOVAN is chilled by the contemporary resonance of Harper Lee’s coming of age tale amidst racism and white supremacy in this excellent production
STUART LAYCOCK visited Bosnia seven times with a medical charity during the civil wars in Yugoslavia and Zone: Poems of the Bosnian War (Mica Press, £7) recalls his experiences in a country “heavy with history and death.../where the 20th century stops/where it slumps into piled earth grave/wooden marker post thrust/stake-like into its vampire heart.”
Those and other lines exemplify how Laycock is especially good at describing the bleak details of a landscape transformed by war:
“The lamp-post is/a thing of almost strange beauty,/something that belongs perhaps/in a plush West End art gallery,/or a fine white-walled museum./Transformed by the/frontline’s flying metal/from solid pillar to a/delicate lace-like structure... pierced/time and time again/by bullets and shells.”
From post-human revolution in Puerto Rico to trans poetics and queer mythmaking, these three books that imagine new ways of being together
ALAN MORRISON recommends a consummate, heart-warming collection about a working-class upbringing in the industrial north-east
ANDY HEDGECOCK recommends that these beautifully written diaries from Gaza be essential reading for thick-skinned MPs
ANDY CROFT rallies poets to the impossible task of speaking truth to a tin-eared politician


