Ahoy!
You’ve noticed that absence in your life haven’t you? A slow
grinding down of your soul, that terrifying whisper of isolation? Well by now
you’ve probably worked out that it’s because I’ve not been updating this blog
very much. But worry not, lamb, I’ve a bounty of book reviews to keep your
brain cell warm.
First it’s worth mentioning our event at the Scottish Poetry
Library on April 25th (starting 6:30 – get there early for a seat): Rockets For Edwin Morgan. It’s a
celebration of the great man himself, with sci-fi readings from Ron Bultin, Pippa Goldschmidt, AndyJackson, Claire Askew, Ian McLachlan, Kelley Swain and James McGonigal. BOOK YER TICKETS NOW. A blog ditty penned by my cursed hand is here.
And now a host of reviews! If you don’t already own Where
Rockets Burn Through: Contemporary Science Fiction Poems from the UK then I can
only assume you’ve been incapacitated for the last 4 months, or that you’re
just a terrible person. Salvation can be found here: Penned in the Margins.
And so to the reviews, keep 'em coming!
Star * Line (please scroll to the bottom of the page):
“I should probably
check my enthusiasm and not say this is a landmark anthology, but I believe it
is a major one [...] This is fresh stuff, and very accessible”
“An achievement and a milestone”
John Field writes
a poetic and insightful review, with pictures to boot!
“When Rockets
Burn Through is an anthology with considerable ambition.”
StarBurst awards 8 out of 10 stars:
“Science
fiction and poetry, on paper at least, should be the perfect marriage. And,
fortunately, it is! [...] an excellent addition to the science fiction poetry
genre”
Geek Chocolate
published the most ‘critical’ review of the book to date, summarising:
“as with the exploration of the universe, those scattered
diamonds in the night are the reason for the journey through the dark spaces between”
The Telegraph
calls Where Rockets Burn Through:
“an unusual stocking filler”
“science fiction and poetry are, on this evidence, very
complimentary forms”
Sidekick books
call it:
“moreish work [...] a real genre zapper”
Russell Jones