LETTERPRESS ‘A print is properly a dent on the page. The whole history of letterpress is the abolition of that dent.’ Eric Gill Your first challenge is how to read upside down and left to right. When you’ve mastered this, compose your chosen letters on the stick, like Scrabble. Don’t fret at impenetrable […]
Three Poems

Jardin des Plantes The ruined summer’s lush despondency, Arrested, Tennysonian…Late afternoon Grows fog from all-day rain. Did we have prospects, once? We are the characters we’ve read about, Provincial and enraged At waking up to find we’re dead. In the insanitary capitals Grim functionaries glare Across the sodden parks As the invasion is delayed, […]
Two Poems

The Humane Society My mother brought home the strangest creatures: a lamb wearing a big white diaper; a blind raccoon; a wolfhound with a broken hip, spooked by birthday balloons— Then there was Mary Lou: two hundred sixty pounds and bruised, she held a big leather purse, drank diet pop, smacked pink gum, went […]
Two Poems

2d6 We followed the train of thought through to its termination. It was a mistake we wouldn’t make soon, but would eventually, again and again. The populations shiver and sit, mysteryless, like commoners knighted on the eve of a battle suddenly postponed or perhaps cancelled entirely, nobody knew? We hope it was once as simple […]
Richard Burton, A Strong Song Tows Us: The Life of Basil Bunting (InfiniteIdeas) £30
In Under Briggflatts, Donald Davie declared that Thom Gunn has a public, whereas Basil Bunting has a following. That the former may no longer be guaranteed might have been confirmed with the recent news that August Kleinzahler has had to step in and buy the deceased Gunn’s library, because no-one else wanted to. But those […]
Anne Compton, Alongside (Fitzhenry and Whiteside) $14.95
When I first saw this book, with the ghost-like figures on its cover, and that slightly nervy title, I was inevitably reminded of Eliot’s lines from The Waste Land ‘Who is the third who walks always beside you?/ When I count, there are only you and I together./ But when I look ahead up the […]
1984, Liverpool Playhouse, reviewed by Simon Haworth
1984, Liverpool Playhouse (Headlong Theatre), tour continues Sherman Theatre, Cymru 5th – 9th November 2013, West Yorkshire Playhouse 12th – 16th November 2013 and Almeida Theatre, Islington 8th Feb – 29th Mar 2014 by Simon Haworth If rats in a trap ultimately await Winston Smith in the white walled, clinically lit personal hell […]
Catherine O’Flynn, reviewed by Caitrin O’Sullivan
Catherine O’Flynn at the Manchester Literature Festival Saturday 19th October Waterstones Deansgate Drenched from the Manchester rain, I stumbled into Waterstones, Deansgate, to hear Libby Tempest warmly introduce the novelist Catherine O’Flynn. I seemed to be the only one in the room lucky enough to be caught in the sudden thunder and lightning, but I […]
Deborah Levy & Sarah Hall, reviewed by Sarah-Clare Conlon
Deborah Levy & Sarah Hall Thursday 17 October, 7.30pm, International Anthony Burgess Foundation While live Tweeting from Thursday evening’s celebration of the short story, it struck me that both quotes I picked out to share with the ether involved the word “great”. How fitting, I mused: more compact doesn’t have to mean less impact; […]
Clare Shaw and Conor O’Callaghan, reviewed by Chloe Heard
Clare Shaw and Conor O’Callaghan, Manchester Literature Festival at Deansgate, reviewed by Chloe Heard The intimate surroundings of Waterstones was the chosen setting for a reading by contemporary poets Clare Shaw and Conor O’ Callaghan. With a rich northern twang Clare Shaw warmed up a gloomy Mancunian Friday with captivating wit and an insightful explanation […]
A Passion for Sport: Ian McMillan and Owen Sheers, reviewed by Sara Allen
A Passion for Sport : Ian McMillan and Owen Sheers. Manchester Literature Festival at The Green, Oct 16th. Reviewed by Sara Allen As I walk through the heavy doors of Manchester’s premier sports bar ‘The Green’ with its leather sofas, virtual golf machine and snooker tables, I can’t help but think it the most […]
Elaine Feinstein in conversation with Michael Schmidt, Manchester, reviewed by Joe Carrick-Varty
Elaine Feinstein in conversation with Michael Schmidt, Manchester Literature Festival, 13.10.13. Reviewed by Joe Carrick-Varty Elaine Feinstein wrote her first poem when she was eight years old, ‘banging a ball against the garage door to create rhythm’. Who would have known that this Jewish child would flourish into one of the most influential poets […]
I am I am I am: Jackie Kay and Ali Smith discuss Sylvia Plath, reviewed by Eve Foster
Literature Live – I am I am I am: Jackie Kay and Ali Smith discuss Sylvia Plath, Manchester Literature Festival at the Martin Harris Centre, Oct 13th, reviewed by Eve Foster Study windows bellied in Like bubbles about to break These were the opening images of Ali Smith and Jackie Kay’s thoroughly engaging discussion and […]
Jeanette Winterson in conversation with Audrey Niffenegger, reviewed by Lauren Hill
Jeanette Winterson in conversation with Audrey Niffenegger: Manchester Literature Festival at Martin Harris Centre, October 13th, reviewed by Lauren Hill Tonight’s event, held at the Martin Harris Centre for Music and Drama, was a discussion between acclaimed novelist Jeanette Winterson (author of such works as Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit – 1985 – and […]
Sarah Dunant, Manchester Literature Festival, reviewed by Danielle Page

Sarah Dunant, Friends Meeting House, Manchester Literature Festival, Friday 11th October, reviewed by Danielle Page Blood and Beauty is the latest masterpiece from the award winning and hugely renowned historical author Sarah Dunant, who graced the hall of the impressive and yet beautifully simply Friends Meeting House on Friday 11th October. Whilst her last 3 […]
Jordi Punti, Manchester Literature Festival, reviewed by Theodora Gardouni
The Manchester Literature Festival: Jordi Punti Instituto Cervantes on Thursday, October 10th Theodora Gardouni “Maletes Perdudes” (“Lost Luggage”) is the latest award-winning novel of Jordi Punti, who is considered as one of the most important “voices” of Catalan Literature. While Punti is renowned for his short stories, he chose to pleasantly surprise his readership, with […]
Louise Doughty, Manchester Literature Festival, reviewed by Amy Carrington

Louise Doughty at the Manchester Literature Festival: 7pm, October 10th Amy Carrington Louise Doughty, an accomplished author, radio broadcaster and literary judge, walked confidently onto the stage at The International Anthony Burgess Foundation, offering a warm practiced smile at the neatly arranged, mostly female, audience. The intimate event was part of the Manchester Literature Festival, […]
Moniza Alvi & Nadeem Aslam, Manchester Literature Festival, reviewed by Lola Albarn
Lola Albarn Literature Live-Moniza Alvi and Nadeem Aslam, Oct 7th 2013 Moniza Alvi and Nadeem Aslam each read a selection of their work at the Martin Harris Centre on the 7th of October 2013; despite both being incredible writers, who have drawn upon their Pakistani heritage to inspire and shape their work, for me, Nadeem […]
New collections from Anne Fitzgerald and David Troupes, reviewed by John North
David Troupes, The Simple Men (Two Ravens Press) £7.99 Anne Fitzgerald, Beyond the Sea (Salmon Poetry) £10.00 The Simple Men. ‘The Simple Man […]’, a sequence interspersed throughout, forms a backbone. One does not feel it to be heaved up from the Everyman, or Wordsworth’s ballads. Do we still ‘choose incidents and situations from common […]
All My Sons, The Royal Exchange, reviewed by Simon Haworth
All My Sons, Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester, Runs till 26 October 2013, Tickets from £10-36 Talawasa Theatre Company’s version of All My Sons, directed by Michael Buffong, is very much in classical style. Arthur Miller’s script is treated with great respect. All those perennial Miller themes – fate and the human urge to control his […]
New collections from John Whale and Tara Bergin, reviewed by John North
John Whale, Frieze (Carcanet Press) £9.95 Tara Bergin, This is Yarrow (Carcanet Press) £9.95 I don’t know what to say about poetry any more. Lives and deaths. ‘Fallen warriors, a conquistador, a cat […]’ in John Whale’s superb Frieze. Yes, I’d noticed that cat. I loved it. I don’t know why. “Not my thing”. I […]
LS Lowry and the Painting of Modern Life Tate Britain, London, reviewed by Ian Pople
When my companion suggested that we go to the Lowry exhibition at Tate Britain, my reaction was lukewarm at best. Surrounded by Lowry as we are in Manchester, one feels as though Lowry’s ‘matchstick men and matchstick cats and dogs’ are too well known as it is. And the exhibition has also divided the critics; […]
Dore Kiesselbach, Salt Pier, (Pittsburgh UP) $15.95 reviewed by James Reith.
With a title that simultaneously evokes the seaside, industry and a condiment, Salt Pier isn’t a volume trying to launch fireworks on its title page; something which its beige and seemingly rusting cover doesn’t help to dispel. A quick search of the title on Google, however, almost solely returns a popular diving spot on the […]
New Pamphlets from Rosalind Hudis and Susan Grindley
Rosalind Hudis Terra Ignota (Rack Press) £5.00 Susan Grindley New Reader (Rack Press) £5.00 It is a cliché of contemporary criticism to say that art treats the liminal, that which sits on the edge. Often the liminal is treated as just that; a thing which simply sits at the edge, representing a kind of boundary, […]
MR10 Fiction Highlight with Nick Holdstock

Nick Holdstock’s striking story ‘The False River’ was a knockout from our slushpile that made it into MR9. I asked Nick to highlight an author from the current issue.
Love Supreme Jazz Festival: July 5 – 7, Glynde Place, Sussex, reviewed by Ian Pople
Well… Jazz with a lot of RnB/Soul thrown in. Especially on the Main Stage on the first ‘real’ day, Saturday, where performances started with the wonderful a capella Naturally 7 and, via Michael Kiwanuka, finished with The Bryan Ferry Orchestra! So calling it a ‘Jazz’ Festival was stretching it a bit, and other punters seemed […]
Caleb Klaces, Bottled Air (Eyewear Publishing) £12.99, reviewed by Janet Rogerson
At the core of this collection there is a preoccupation with the elements, of air, water and fire as both unreliable and constant. The scattered arrangement of the first poem ‘Parachute’ belies its opening line, ‘… So now we are in charge’. There is a breathless quality to this poem which works extremely well. Formal […]
Macbeth, Manchester International Festival
Kenneth Branagh’s Macbeth is performed in a deconsecrated church in the back end of Ancoats, between empty office blocks, multi-storey car parks and the Toys’r’us superstore. The audience, of around 220, was called out in batches from the ticket office to the venue. Looking down from the 8 banked boxes, the audience can initially make […]
The Hat-Stand Union, Caroline Bird, (Carcanet, 2013, £9.95), reviewed by Janet Rogerson
The poems in this collection are clever and funny, but I’m often suspicious of clever and funny: Funny how? I’ve been programmed to ask, and the word ‘clever’ is all too often just criticism in disguise. A lot of poems are funny and clever but there has to be more, and happily there is. This […]
CNW /SALC micropoem competition
The CNW / SALC micropoem competition drew 94 entries: the judges met yesterday with the unenviable task of picking just 3 poems for prizes and here is their verdict: ‘We thought Andrew McMillan‘s ‘train, backwards’, the winning micropoem, made every syllable count and created an amazingly rich visual world in such a small space. Its […]
Django Unchained (2012), dir. Quentin Tarantino, reviewed by Janet Rogerson
Two years before the American Civil War, Django (Jamie Foxx), a freed slave turned bounty hunter makes his way to Mississippi to free his wife Broomhilda (Kerry Washington), a slave at the Candieland plantation owned by Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio). We have come to expect a highly stylised, postmodern extravaganza whenever Tarantino directs, and we […]
The Impossible (2012), dir. Juan Antonio Bayona, reviewed by Janet Rogerson
The Impossible tells the story of a middle-class British family holidaying in Thailand at Christmastime. Unluckily for them (and many others) their trip coincides with the 26th December 2004 tsunami. The build-up is short: they are a typical family, three boys, one a disgruntled adolescent, played impressively by Tom Holland, (who is destined to learn […]
MR10 Poetry Highlight with Seán Hewitt

I asked Seán Hewitt, whose poems were featured in MR9, to highlight a poet from the current issue. In an especially poetry-rich issue, it couldn’t have been an easy task.
President Higgins on Manchester’s Irish Connection

In November 2012, President Michael D Higgins visited the Northwest of England and made a number of speeches, including this address at the University of Manchester, which we are delighted to publish for the first time.