Two Poems

Amateur musicians join me unexpectedly so
a kind of music I know nothing about –

Read More 0 Comments

A Season in Paradise

I find him in Empangeni. My father lies on his back at the edge of the sugar-cane valley, one arm under his head, the other flung out, fingers plaiting scrub and yellow weed flowers.

Read More 0 Comments

Two Poems

I find her tilted, head up
and listening, ear shaped for the universe.

Read More 0 Comments

Two Poems

Feed it first
with mustard spoons,

Read More 0 Comments

The Traffic Noir

The films were usually shown, where I grew up, in school libraries during the normal run of the school day …

Read More 0 Comments

Three Poems

Even the words overcast December day have slack in them, a falling away sound.

Read More 1 Comment

The Room

There is only the room.

Read More 0 Comments

Digressions by Robyn Sarah and White Sheets by Beverley Bie Brahic

by Ian Pople

Read More 0 Comments

Anne Carson, Antigonick (Bloodaxe Books) £7.99 reviewed by Jennifer Thorp

by Jennifer Thorp

Read More 0 Comments

New Collections from George Szirtes and Matthew Sweeney, reviewed by Laura Webb

by Laura Webb

Read More 0 Comments

Gangster Squad (2013), dir. Ruben Fleischer

by Ian Pople

Read More 0 Comments

End of Watch (2012), dir. David Ayer, reviewed by Janet Rogerson

by Janet Rogerson

Read More 0 Comments

I, Anna (2012), dir. Barnaby Southcombe

by Ian Pople

Read More 0 Comments

Jack White at The Empress Ballroom, Blackpool

by Janet Rogerson

Read More 0 Comments

Laura Ellen Joyce, The Museum of Atheism (Salt Publishing), reviewed by Alex Johnson

by Alec Johnson

Read More 0 Comments

Our New Site

Welcome to the new home of The Manchester Review.

Read More 0 Comments

MR9 Editorial

As we move to this newly designed site, we are keen to maintain the onscreen integrity of the poems and prose we publish …

Read More 0 Comments

Between My Father and the King

My father fought in the First World War that used to be called ‘Great’ until the truth of its greatness was questioned and the denial of its greatness accepted.

Read More 0 Comments

Two Poems

All along the skyline, cranes
quiet above rooftops

Read More 0 Comments

Worthless Men

After one long winter dredging the waterways for Meek’s Steam Navigation Company, and a second short summer hauling ice …

Read More 0 Comments

The Wounds

Betrayal begins at home, a fine-boned fledgling,
blown-in through your window, heart a-shiver.

Read More 0 Comments

Exposure

Gerda Fuchs owned the guesthouse at the highest point of the village of Zander.

Read More 0 Comments

Soundtrack for the End of the World

‘Promise me leaf-blowers will cut out first,
Spinning in sparkless Catherine Wheels
Then dying like blue-bottles.’

Read More 0 Comments

The False River

Number of this bus: the 6838, which starts in L.A. and runs to Sacramento.

Read More 0 Comments

Two Poems

Not even the owls had eyes hollower
than mine after the dark had emptied them.

Read More 0 Comments

Watergate

I try to sleep on Miriam’s silk divan, can’t, and walk far in a snowstorm to some 24 hour porn booth …

Read More 0 Comments

Two Poems

He slipped out in the intermission with binoculars to gaze at the stars for inspiration.

Read More 0 Comments

Two Poems

The pig with the black feet is an insomniac.

Read More 0 Comments

Two Poems

For a good half hour this morning, from five
till the mobile’s ringtone woke me in a sweat,
I was young again and Mammy was alive.

Read More 0 Comments

Ghost

My sister Ailsa didn’t talk much. She didn’t want to. It was because she listened instead, and she watched.

Read More 0 Comments

Two Poems

The kumquat tree you brought for me
from Florida, it likes the sun, you said,
so I found a place outside

Read More 0 Comments

Rich Jim

Karen starts it. ‘Tell you who’s got loads of money,’ she says, ‘that Jim. Hasn’t he, Des? Bloody minted he is.’

Read More 0 Comments

Exit

The room is empty apart from the plants,
the people and all of the furniture.

Read More 0 Comments

Three Poems

If what wakes you of a sudden, past midnight
are the war or mating calls from roaming kids

Read More 0 Comments

Adam Marek and Guy Ware, reviewed by Jaisal Marmion

by Jaisal Marmion

Read More 0 Comments