STRANGE THINGS ARE HAPPENING: countercultural lodestone Richard Norris on music
As Strange Things Are Happening makes clear, Richard Norris might not be a household musical name, but's he's still a countercultural lodestone.
As Strange Things Are Happening makes clear, Richard Norris might not be a household musical name, but's he's still a countercultural lodestone.
I Heard Her Call My Name talks, with honesty and lack of self-pity, about Lucy Sante’s internal struggle and her difficulties with transitioning late in life.
Situating itself in Wales' grand and varied landscapes, with Tir, Carwyn Graves lays out the ecology and history of this country by exploring each layer.
Lobster, the newest collection by the highly prolific author and poet Hollie McNish feels honest, fresh and like a conversation with your wittiest friend.
The Underground Sea collects rarely-seen work by John Berger on the topic of coal mining, evidently with the 40th anniversary of the strike in mind.
The Language Puzzle offers both fact and theory in a quest to uncover the backstory on one of human’s oldest traits.
We Are Together Because is a frightening read with unforgettable characters – forced to explore their true colours in the end days.
In laying down roots in Wales, the novel Assimilation offers a unique take on dual identity, divided into segments that capture the fragmentation of being.
Maniacal space nuns, interstellar pirates, sapphic romances and a blind protagonist... Meredith Mooring's Redsight has a lot going for it.
You will struggle to find a more comprehensive and accessible introduction to the history of the opium trade than Amitav Ghosh’s Smoke And Ashes.
Jessi Jezewska Stevens’ stories in Ghost Pains are subtle, literary and dizzying, picking you up and then setting you down somewhere slightly different.
An intense coming-of-age story, novel Blessings is a thought-provoking debut from Chukwuebuka Ibeh.