Book Review: Sleeping Beauties – Stephen King and Owen King Pelican30 November 2017 Power balance is a recurrent theme: power between inmates and wardens, between men and women, and between human and non-human. Maddy Compston reviews. Literature and Creative Writing0 Comments182 views
The Quasi-Definitive Soft Serve Study Pelican2 November 2017 Jorge Luis Fonseca reviews. Voice0 Comments22 views
REVIEW: This painting my nephew did at his daycare Pelican20 August 2017 Harry Peter Sanderson reviews. Uncategorised0 Comments361 views
We’ve Been Reading Pelican14 July 2017 Margaret the First, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, Break Blow Burn and Phillip Larkin: Life, Art and Love. Literature and Creative Writing0 Comments76 views
REVIEW: Heartworms – The Shins Pelican30 June 2017 Jasmine Tara Erkan reviews. Music0 Comments33 views
REVIEW: Everything Is Forgotten – Methyl Ethel Pelican30 June 2017 Zoe Tongue reviews. Music0 Comments162 views
4 Review: Little Men Pelican20 December 2016 Sachs’s talent appears to be this finely attuned rendering of the details of everyday living, pressed against human desires and projections. Review by Ryan Suckling. Film and Production0 Comments28 views
4.5 Review: Our Little Sister (Umimachi Diary) Pelican29 March 2016 "Directed by perhaps the leading exponent of the boutique family drama, Hirokazu Kore-eda’s work reappropriates Akimi Yoshida’s manga series to present a fresh take on the complexities of sisterhood." Film and Production0 Comments108 views
3.7 Review: Rams Pelican22 March 2016 Make no mistake, 'Rams' is no blockbuster, and if you are looking for an action packed movie you’d better look elsewhere. This is, instead, a quiet film, with little dialogue, that celebrates little gestures. Patrick Bendall reviews. Film and Production0 Comments27 views
PWF Review: Poetica Pelican21 February 2016 Hosted by Kate Noske, Peter Rose, Lucy Dougan and Dennis Haskell shared their poetry with the audience, proffering beautifully crafted words that were at times alight with humour and at others studded with deep pain. Bryce Newton reviews. Literature and Creative Writing0 Comments18 views