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A feel-good and wholesome show, Amelia Gibbs reviews Bedknobs and Broomsticks ahead of it's arrival to the Theatre Royal, Nottingham, from October 6 – October 10....
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Sharon Hsieh reviews Zadie Smith's Swing Time for September's Book Of The Month....
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Cora-Laine Moynihan The pain of the inevitable. That is what Rachel Griffin addresses throughout her moving debut The Nature of Witches. A tragic tale of inevitable feelings like grief, loss, and insecurity. Yet also an empowering tale of a girl that rediscovers hope, love and most of all herself....
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Gemma Cockrell reviews '2021' from the Nottingham New Theatre's Spring online season....
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Just like Ernest Hemingway’s image and legacy, the style of A Moveable Feast (1964) is simplistic, straightforward and very much masculine. But don’t hold it against the book just yet; A Moveable Feast is also deeply honest and personal....
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The 2017 Laureate of Nobel Prize in Literature Kazuo Ishiguro returns to his exploration of scientific-fiction after his 2005 novel Never Let Me Go, with his latest novel Klara and the Sun....
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Gemma Cockrell reviews the moving and captivating poetry of Impact's very own Luwa Adebanjo, upon the release of her debut poetry anthology 'A Visitor Who Belongs Here'....