Alan Paton’s Cry the Beloved Country begins, famously, with a prose paean to the South African countryside. Paton’s description of the ‘holiness’ of this ground establishes it as the place to which the character, Kumalo, must return even though the land ‘cannot be again’. Sheena Kalayil’s fine debut novel begins with a sentence which also […]
R. F. Langley, Complete Poems (Carcanet Press) £12.99
This volume is a Complete Poems in the sense that Elizabeth Bishop published her Complete Poems in 1969: these are the poems which Roger Langley completed for publication. This volume is also similar to Bishop’s book in that it is full of poems which seem both perfected and perfect. Perhaps Langley, for whom Pound was […]
La Mélancolie Des Dragons, HOME, reviewed by Fran Slater
Aging rockers hiding in a trailer, a headbanging competition in a broken down car, floating wigs, ski slopes and fake snow, a bubble machine, and some strangely impressive and multifunctional inflatables. In an extremely bizarre way, La Mélancolie Des Dragons kind of had it all. In other ways, this almost insane mix of components, along […]
Dark Arteries, Rambert at The Lowry, reviewed by Elizabeth Mitchell
Rambert, ‘Dark Arteries,’ ‘The Three Dancers,’ ‘Terra Incognito’ at The Lowry, September 30 2015 A word of warning: ever since I saw Mark Baldwin’s ‘Eternal Light’ aged 15, I have dreamt of being in the Rambert. There was just something about the so cleverly choreographed and very balletic Contemporary dance, with the huge side of […]
So Here We Are, The Royal Exchange, reviewed by Şima İmşir Parker

So Here We Are, dir. Steven Atkinson, The Royal Exchange Pidge (Sam Melvin), Pugh (Mark Weinman) and Smudge (Dorian Jerome Simpson) are sitting on a container representing a Southend sea wall, trying to remember who wrote Peter Pan. Is it Walt Disney or Barry someone? Or perhaps Walter Barry? This is right after the funeral […]
Welcome to Night Vale, Albert Hall, reviewed by James D Ward
Welcome to Night Vale Albert Hall, Manchester, 24/09/2015 Podcasts are simply radio for our on demand times, so it’s appropriate that one of the more popular shows purports to be the broadcasts from a community station situated in an otherworldly part of the American Midwest. Welcome to Night Vale, with its mix of […]
The Crucible, The Royal Exchange, reviewed by Jon Greenaway
The Crucible, dir. Caroline Steinbeis – The Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester First performed in 1953 Arthur Miller’s play has quickly become a cultural touchstone, becoming a fixture of GCSE and A-Level syllabi and beloved by undergraduate and repertory theatre companies for its wide casting and political themes. Therefore, the challenge or any new production is to […]
Swan Lake, Birmingham Royal Ballet at The Lowry, by Elizabeth Mitchell

Birmingham Royal Ballet’s Swan Lake, The Lowry, September 23 2015 With Swan Lake being such a classic, it ways runs the danger of being a safely enjoyable but slightly dull way to spend an evening. However, David Bintley has once more pulled it out of the bag with his energetic direction of Peter Wright’s masterpiece. […]
Petite Noir, Deaf Institute, reviewed by Marli Roode
Conventional wisdom has it that Manchester is a city dedicated to telling and retelling its own story. That every weekend, countless clubs play music made in the city – made by the city, it starts to feel like – and everyone dances like Ten Storey Love Song hasn’t been on the playlist every weekend for […]
The Room, Joshua Brooks, reviewed by Emma Rhys
The Room (by Harold Pinter), Joshua Brooks, Princess Street, Manchester, 28–30 September 2015 I would highly recommend you take 50 minutes out of an evening next week to scratch your head and hold your breath at the absurdity and intensity of a Pinter play. This depiction of The Room has been thoughtfully considered and excellently […]
By Far The Greatest Team, The Lowry, reviewed by Fran Slater

By Far the Greatest Team – The Lowry Mixing football and theatre is an interesting but risky move. On paper, the high drama of both forms of entertainment should lend themselves to an exciting combination, the opportunity to bring two of our nation’s favourite pastimes together to create something original and hopefully at least half […]
Don Paterson, 40 Sonnets (Faber and Faber) £14.99
As one might expect from the self-explanatory and rather straightforward title 40 Sonnets, the fundamental concern of Don Paterson’s new collection of poetry is that particular form. It is a deceptive title however, very probably deliberately so, as those descriptors are not very applicable to the poems contained within the book. The modern precedent for […]
Interview with Luke Norris, So Here We Are, The Royal Exchange, by Şima İmşir Parker
So Here We Are is the recipient of the Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting 2013, the biggest national competition for playwriting. It is a play by a young writer, Luke Norris, who pens plays and scripts in addition to his bright acting career. Goodbye To All That was his debut play in 2012, which was first […]
Jee Leong Koh, Steep Tea (Carcanet Press) £9.99
In an interview Jee Leong Koh describes himself as ‘a lyric poet in an anti-lyric age’. He goes on to criticise the lyric ‘I’ in robust, post-modern terms, while defending the lyric itself as ‘answering to some very deep human need for complex music made by the human voice.’ There is a wide variety in […]
Interview with Rachel Redford, The Crucible, The Royal Exchange, by Jon Greenaway

With Caroline Steinbeis bringing a new production of ‘The Crucible’ to the Royal Exchange Theatre in the centenary year of Arthur Miller’s birth, The Manchester Review took the chance to talk to Rachel Redford, up and coming actor and RADA 2013 graduate about her role in the play, dealing with a character who is “so […]
Show Me the Money, People’s History Museum, Manchester, reviewed by Emma Rhys
Show Me the Money: The Image of Finance, 1700 to the Present, The People’s History Museum, Manchester, 11 July 2015–24 January 2016 After viewing this excellent exhibition at the People’s History Museum – containing a wide variety of dynamic works by artists from the eighteenth century to today, as well as economic artefacts and enlightening […]
David Bowie Convention, King’s Arms, reviewed by Fran Slater
Bowie and beer. That should be pretty much all I have to say, shouldn’t it? There can’t be many combinations more promising than a day dedicated to music’s most prolific genius and some dedicated ales brewed specifically for the occasion. There’s a fair few reasons that I can’t just stop there, though. Not least because […]
New collections from Hans Magnus Enzensberger and Jan Wagner, reviewed by Ian Pople
Jan Wagner Self-Portrait with a Swarm of Bees (Arc) £10.99 Hans Magnus Enzensberger New Selected Poems (Bloodaxe) £15.00 Two orders of magnitude, you might say: Enzensberger, born in 1929, who has bestrode German poetry since the late 1950s, who was associated with Boll and Grass in Group 47, who grew up in the west, but […]
Donna Stonecipher, Model City (Shearsman Books) £8.95
There has always been a hypnotic, meditative quality to Donna Stonecypher’s writing. Her previous book, The Cosmopolitan, was inspired by Joseph Cornell’s boxes; its delicate self-contained prose poems held small moments up to the light and turned them so that their angles and lights gleamed and twinkled. Model City is divided into 72 numbered sections, […]
Sema Kaygusuz, The Well of Trapped Words (Comma Press) £9.99, reviewed by Şima Imsir
The receipent of the English Pen Translates! Award 2013, The Well of Trapped Words by Sema Kaygusuz is a collection of short stories previously published in her various short story collections in Turkish. The stories in this book have been translated by Maureen Freely, the translator of prominent Turkish writers including the nobel laurette Orhan […]
The Stars are Made of Concrete, The Kings Arms, reviewed by Fran Slater
The Stars are Made of Concrete, Kings Arms, Salford, 26th & 27th July 2015 Anyone who has spent much time on the dole or in the job centre would have cracked a wry smile as they made their way into Salford’s most interesting theatre for The Stars are Made of Concrete. Carol (Jo Dakin) was […]
Shaun of the Dead, The Dancehouse, reviewed by Fran Slater
Shaun of the Dead , The Dancehouse, 22nd – 24th July 2015 It could be argued that you should know what to expect when viewing a stage version of Shaun of the Dead. This would be a different trip to the theatre than many. There were unlikely to be any pretensions, soliloquys would be at a […]
The Skriker, The Royal Exchange, reviewed by Peter Wild
The Skriker, Royal Exchange, 1st July – 1st August 2015 Firstofall:imaginewordssoclosetogetherthatyoucan’talwaystellthemapart. You’re in the Royal Exchange, a space transformed, adorned, made out, played out like a Siberian fighting pit, your humble bumble of a reviewer one floor up looking down on a lot of anxious, middle-class people sat at benches wondering, perhaps, what they have […]
A Love Supreme, 2015, reviewed by Ian Pople
Love Supreme, Glynde Place, Sussex. 3rd – 5th July There is a stunned silence around Glynde Place on the first Monday in July. People wander from the toilet blocks, and back and forth from the Wide Away Café with a pinched look on their faces. It’s not just that someone’s taken their holiday away, […]
A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Salford College, reviewed by Alex Pearce
A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Pendleton Shakespeare Company, Ben Kingsley Theatre, Salford College, 22nd-24th June 2015 Whilst strolling through Buile Hill Park, the clouds gathered, creating a sudden eerie change in the light. My companion asked, ‘Will there be ghosts?’ Not tonight. For we were travelling to see the Pendleton Shakespeare Company – not, presently, a […]
Half a Person, The Kings Arms, reviewed by Fran Slater
Half a Person, The Kings Arms, Salford, 20th June 2015 Perhaps the most special thing about the upstairs theatre at The Kings Arms is its simplicity. In a dark attic with only old pub chairs to sit on, there can be little room for the spectacular settings and props seen in many of Greater Manchester’s more […]
Rebecca Perry, Beauty/Beauty (Bloodaxe Books) £9.95
Rebecca Perry has already garnered a lot of attention and a number of prizes in her short career so far. Her Seren Pamphlet little armoured was a PBS Pamphlet Choice and this book is a PBS recommendation. This book shows just why Perry has gained this recognition, but it is a book I admire rather […]
Michelle Green, Jebel Marra (Comma Press) £9.99, reviewed by L. A. Billing
In Jebel Marra, Michelle Green’s new collection of short stories by Comma Press, we experience Darfur through the eyes of the witnesses: traumatized, broken and defiantly human. We see the desert, refugee camps and mountains of Western Sudan through translators, aid workers, journalists, archaeologists, but most poignantly of all through the displaced, often female victims […]
Constellations, The Lowry, reviewed by Fran Slater
Constellations, The Lowry, 9th-13th June 2015 A stage surrounded by white balloons and some slightly hypnotic music. Two actors enter the room. Lights flicker through the balloons, alerting the audience to the fact that something different could be about to happen in front of them, a play that might test the boundaries. Then Marianne (Louise […]
Selima Hill, Jutland (Bloodaxe Books) £9.95, reviewed by Lucy Winrow
Hill’s sixteenth poetry collection Jutland unites the award-winning pamphlet Advice on Wearing Animal Prints and a new sequence, Sunday Afternoons at the Gravel-Pits. The former is comprised of twenty-six short, single stanza poems, each titled and ordered alphabetically. The omniscient narrator introduces us to ‘Agatha’, a social outsider who is possibility on the autistic spectrum […]
Jon Ronson at The Met, Bury, reviewed by Fran Slater
Jon Ronson, The Met, Bury, 22nd May 2015 From his son’s first brush with the world’s worst swearword, to strange encounters with Iain Paisley, via Frank Sidebottom and experiences of secret terrorist meetings, Jon Ronson told tales of his extremely fascinating life with the humbleness and wit his fans have grown used to. He also […]
The Funfair, HOME, reviewed by Fran Slater
The Funfair, HOME, 14th May – 13th June The Funfair will be memorable for a whole host of reasons. For some audience members, it might be the bizarre but brilliant freak show from just before the interval, when a blue-headed gorilla girl called Juanita (CiCi Howells) serenaded us from the centre of the stage. For […]
To Kill a Mockingbird, The Lowry, reviewed by Fran Slater
To Kill a Mockingbird, The Lowry, May 19th-2rd To Kill a Mockingbird is everybody’s favourite novel. Well maybe not everybody’s, but you know what I’m getting at. The most studied book on the planet, a feature on more English lit curriculums than any other work of fiction, and a novel that has survived far longer […]
The Call of Nature, The Kings Arms, reviewed by Fran Slater
The Call of Nature, The Kings Arms, Salford, 18th-24th May The Vaults at Salford’s best boozer have already proved themselves to be an optimum place to stage a play. Last year’s The Dumb Waiter from Ransack Theatre was not only a brilliant piece of theatre – it was amplified and improved by the gritty and […]
Dara O’Briain at The Lowry, reviewed by Emma Rhys
Dara O’Briain, Crowd Tickler, The Lowry, May 11-13 2015 If you’re going to book a night to catch a Dara O’Briain stand-up show make it a Monday! As he kept asking us – what are yous doing out on a Monday night?! Yous can snooze if you like… – it became increasingly clear snoozing was […]