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  • av Cecilie Lind
    159,-

    Highly-acclaimed in Denmark and soon to appear as a film, Girlbeast is a probing, unsettling and sensual reinterpretation of the Lolita narrative, where power dynamics are vague and ever-shifting and romantic encounters can't always be separated from assault. Through sharp speed-poetry-like writing, combined with a daring and addictive plot, Girlbeast offers a fresh take on the debate about #metoo, sexual consent and power dynamics.

  • av Lina Scheynius
    169

    A hybrid text and photobook by internationally-renowned photographer Lina Scheynius, combining diary extracts with essays and black-and-white photographs to explore the break-up of a relationship, alongside reflections about art, photography, motherhood, belonging and creativity.

  • av Jen Calleja
    169

    Fair: The Life-Art of Translation, is a satirical, refreshing and brilliantly playful book about learning the art of translation, being a bookworker in the publishing industry, growing up, family, and class. Loosely set in an imagined book fair/art fair/fun fair, in which every stall or ride imitates a real-world scenario or dilemma which must be observed and negotiated, the book moves between personal memories and larger questions about the role of the literary translator in publishing, about fairness and hard work, about the ways we define success, and what it means - and whether it is possible - to make a living as an artist. Fair is also interested in questions of upbringing, background, support, how different people function in the workplace, and the ways in which people are excluded or made invisible in different cultural and creative industries. It connects literary translation to its siblings in other creative arts to show how creative and subjective a practice it is while upholding the ethics and politics at play when we translate someone else's work. Blurring the lines between memoir, autofiction, satire and polemic, Fair is a singularly inventive and illuminating book by one of the UK's most original and admired writers and translators.

  • av Imogen Cassels
    169

    Silk Work is the debut collection by Imogen Cassels, a Foyle Young Poet of the Year. Weaving multiple sources from literature, philosophy, visual art and history into ways of reading and documenting, the poems in Silk Work are an exercise in language's inbuilt, radiant futility, which is both its suffering and its joy.

  • av Kate Zambreno
    159,-

    Inspired by the lectures of Roland Barthes, Anne Carson, and Jorge Luis Borges, Appendix Project collects 11 talks and essays written in the course of the year following the publication of Book of Mutter. Zambreno's most original and dazzling thinking and writing to date.

  • av Kate Zambreno
    159,-

    Book of Mutter is a tender and disquieting meditation on the ability of writing, photography, and memory to embrace shadows while in the throes-and dead calm-of grief. Neither memoir, essay, nor poetry, it is an uncategorisable text that draws upon a repertoire of genres to write into and against silence.

  • av Chloe Aridjis
    169

  • av Derek Jarman
    189,-

    A facsimile edition of Derek Jarman's sole, early, extremely rare poetry book A Finger in the Fishes Mouth, originally published in 1972. Heavily illustrated from Jarman's collection of postcards, the book combines text and visual imagery in a way which foreshadows his subsequent style as an artist and filmmaker. With the majority of the first edition having been destroyed by Jarman, this makes available a missing, significant piece of his oeuvre.

  • av Hasib Hourani
    169

    Hasib Hourani's debut collection, rock flight, is a book-length poem that follows personal and historical narrative centered on the violent occupation of Palestine. Searing and fierce, tender and pleading, rock flight moves between poetry and prose, historical events and meditations on language to create a vital interactive reading experience.

  • av Ahren Warner
    269,-

    I Will Pay to Make it Bigger is a novella and photobook by poet and visual artist Ahren Warner. Through text and image, the book searches for a way through a network of related subjects, ideas and feelings: the consumption of pleasure, freedom and hedonism; the purchase of feeling; the construction of (particularly male) identity as a cultural product, and the fragility of that construction; the fine, blurry lines between acquisition, enjoyment, love and desire, and the way any and all of these can be used to fill holes in our selves, even if only momentarily, and even if destructively. The book is also a work of both autofiction and docufiction. The photographs were produced during three months documenting 'party hostels' in Thailand. Yet, for all that these photographs might seem to exist as the documentation of 'moments', they are in fact quite painstakingly constructed: almost always beginning their lives as several still frames from film footage which have been composited and processed at length to reintroduce an artificial sense of movement, to become both a record of movement and hedonism, and a fictionalised artefact of impulse, drive and motion, that speaks directly, and on a level of materiality, to the concerns of the novella, whilst never illustrating, and only very rarely interacting directly, with the text itself.

  • av Sulaiman Addonia
    159,-

  • av Danielle Dutton
    159,-

    In Prairie, Dresses, Art, Other, Danielle Dutton imagines new models for how literature might work in our fractured times. The collection covers an inventive selection of subjects in four eponymous sections which contrast and echo one another. Out of these varied materials, Dutton builds a haunting landscape of strangeness and beauty.

  • av Carmen Pellegrino
    159,-

    The Earth is Falling is a haunting and magical novel based around the existence of an abandoned village outside Naples. The deserted houses are peopled with ghosts who live in a perpetual present from which time has been abolished. The village appears to be semi-alive as it awaits the landslide that will eventually lead to its abandonment.

  • av Sasja Janssen
    159,-

    Virgula is an award-winning collection by acclaimed Dutch poet Sasja Janssen, and her second collection to be published in English, translated by Michele Hutchison.

  • av Ed Atkins
    159,-

    Sorcerer, a collaborative between British artist Ed Atkins and American poet Steven Zultanski, is a book in the form of a script/novel/manual about the pleasures of being with others and of being alone. Sorcerer was originally a play commissioned by and staged at Copenhagen's Revolver Theatre in March 2022.

  • av Dan Burt
    145,-

  •  
    189,-

    Intertitles is an anthology of work situated at the intersection of poetry and the visual arts.

  • av Bekki Perriman
    159,-

  • av Caleb Klaces
    159,-

  •  
    275,-

    Co-published by Tenement Press and Prototype, Seven Rooms brings together highlights from the archive of Hotel, a magazine for new approaches to fiction, non-fiction & poetry which, since its inception in 2016, provided a space for experimental reflection on literature's status as art & cultural mediator.

  • av Yannis Ritsos
    199

    Greek poet Yannis Ritsos' remarkable collection of 336 single-line poems, composed in 1979, with linocut responses by artist and filmmaker Chiara Ambrosio, created in 2020; each line and image an essential observation of a moment, a personal archive of time past, present and future.

  • av Helen Palmer
    175

    Pleasure Beach is a queer love story set in Blackpool on one day: 16 June 1999. Written in multiple voices and styles, it follows the interconnecting journeys and thoughts of 3 young women over the course of 24 hours and over 18 chapters which are structured and themed in the same way as Homer's Odyssey and James Joyce's Ulysses.

  • av Amy Arnold
    159,-

    Lori & Joe live in a quiet valley where one day is much like another. One morning Lori finds Joe dead. She could call an ambulance but what difference would it make? Instead she goes for a walk. As she makes her way through the fog her thoughts slip between past & present, revealing a marriage marked by isolation, childlessness & a terrible secret.

  • av Lavinia Singer
    175

    Artifice, the debut poetry collection by Lavinia Singer, is an exploration of the art of making. Its poems celebrate the artistry of craftsmanship: how works relate to beauty, and how they might inspire or ensnare.

  • av Jen Calleja
    169

    The highly-anticipated first book-length prose text from acclaimed writer and translator Jen Calleja; a timely and daring exploration of xenophobia, cultural exploitation, historical suppression and the politics of literary translation.

  • av Derek Jarman
    135

    Written in 1971 and published here for the first time, Through the Billboard Promised Land Without Ever Stopping is Derek Jarman's only piece of narrative fiction; a surreal, fable-like, lyrical tale which echoes throughout his later work.

  • av Stephen Watts
    255,-

    Journeys Across Breath collects poems from across the extraordinary career of Stephen Watts. Gathering all of Watts' published works between 1975 and 2005 - as well as a number of unpublished pieces - this collection is an astonishing journey through the life and eyes of a remarkable writer of place and people.

  • av Alan Rossi
    159,-

    Our Last Year is a book about change, transformation and metamorphosis; through the internal narration of its two characters, the novel follows the disintegration and renewal of a marriage, in synthesis with a much wider natural reality.

  •  
    159,-

    The fourth instalment of Prototype's annual anthology: a space for new work, open to all and free from formal guidelines or restrictions. Poetry, prose, visual work and experiments in between.

  • av Yuri Felsen
    159,-

    Deceit is the first major work by Yuri Felsen, referred to by his contemporaries as 'the Russian Proust', a significant writer who died in the gas chambers in Auschwitz. This is the first English translation of this landmark modernist novel.

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