Split Tooth Earl LovelaceLonglisted for the 2018 Scotiabank Giller Prize Winner of the 2019 Indigenous Voices Award for Published Prose in English Fact can be as strange as fiction. It can also be as dark, as violent, as rapturous. In the end, there may be no difference between them. An Inuk girl grows up in Nunavut, Canada, in the 1970s. She knows joy, and friendship, and parents' love. She knows boredom, and listlessness, and bullying. She knows the tedium of the everyday
gorgeous prose
They extend to the Middle and Far East
it features poets from Australia
At the heart of the book is an extraordinary alphabetical sequence about the Grenfell Tower dead and the society that allowed them to die
art or photography in your poetry
Hannah and her friends are in
Gül leaves her native Anatolia and returns to Germany
peace and pleasure
there was widespread critical recognition that here was an outstandingly original new voice
and poems about finding love in a climate of homophobia
not frightened of complexity or of embarking on journeys of discovery in ways that relate him to the radical fictions of Wilson Harris and Latin American magical realism
she was well-placed to observe and listen