Set for early April release, Bitterhall will be the newest instalment in Helen McClory’s bilbliography, which includes Mayhem & Death, On the Edges of Vision and of course, the Goldblum Variations. Bitterhall takes the form of a […]
Book Review: Love and Other Thought Experiments (2020) by Sophie Ward
(My Book 2 of the Year!) Through the lens of philosophical deliberations, Sophie Ward explores one story of many loves in her 2020 novel, Love and Other Thought Experiments. Over […]
Book Review: Expectation (2020) by Anna Hope
Anna Hope’s Expectation explores close female friendships, motherhood and infertility, infidelity and adapting to a life that isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. It follows Hannah, Cate and Lissa, […]
Book review: I’ll Give You the Sun
I’ll Give You the Sun (2014) by Jandy Nelson is pure sunshine – from its bright yellow cover to its colourful, vivid cast of characters. Mid lockdown, it was just […]
Book Review: Conversations with Friends by Sally Rooney
There’s something about Sally Rooney’s writing style that feels like home. It’s familiar and welcoming. I have thought before that the way she writes can be a little objective, like […]
Movie review: Last Night in Soho
LAST NIGHT IN SOHO Dir. Edgar Wright I have been so excited for this movie ever since I first saw it announced on Twitter by writer and director Edgar Wright!!!!!!!!! […]
Movie review: Dune (2021)
DUNE Dir. Denis Villeneuve Dune was exciting – unrelentingly cinematic, packed with polarising visuals and carried by big names performing their asses off. Jason Momoa was there! That’s exciting. I’m […]
Food review: Panang, Glasgow
Panang has been on my list since before it opened – I love Thai food, but don’t know of a lot of places in Glasgow to indulge. So, when I […]
Movie review: Candyman 2021
CANDYMAN Dir. Nia DaCosta, 2021 2021’s Candyman is maybe the scariest horror movie I’ve seen in a long time – I can’t pinpoint exact terrifying moments, all I can say […]
book recommendation roundup: nightmare fuel #1
For me, a good book really makes me feel something. Sally Rooney’s Normal People was so overwhelmingly tender it made me feel a bit nauseous…like, in a good way though. […]