Current Issue: January - February 2026
PN Review 287

In this issue:

Alberto Manguel - With the Lobsters into Sea
Abū Nuwās - When ‘The Wine of Life is Drawn’
Kirsty Gunn - To travel both and be one traveller…
Muriel Spark and Katherine Mansfield Give Life Lessons on Poetry in Prose

Chen Yuhong - Poems
Translated by George O’Connell and Diana Shi

Richard Price - from The Accidental Curator
Raymond Queneau - Memento Mori
Tony Roberts - The Magnetic Field of William F. Buckley Jr.
Mike Freeman - Re-Visiting the Arcade
Nóra Blascsók - Unscrupulous Mirror

Current Issue: January - February 2026
PN Review 287

With the Lobsters into Sea Alberto Manguel Professor Christopher Pressler, Manchester University Librarian, and colleagues invited Alberto Manguel to deliver the inaugural John Rylands University of Manchester Lecture, to mark the Library’s 125th anniversary. Introducing the event, Professor Pressler celebrated Manguel’s unique place as a modern man of books, who had inspired his own decision to become a librarian. Born in Argentina in 1948, Manguel is known for many things: as one of Jorge Luis Borges’s readers from 1964 to 1968, as his eventual successor as director of the National Library of Argentina; as a novelist, essayist, translator, anthologist, editor. Since 2021 his home has been in Lisbon where he directs the international centre for reading studies, named the Espaço Atlântida in 2023. Among his wonderful books – apart from fiction and essays – are his Dictionary of Imaginary Places (a collaboration......
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Current Issue: January - February 2026
PN Review 287

When ‘The Wine of Life is Drawn’ Abū Nuwās Translated by James E. Montgomery


Sin

1
Dappled with Moonbeams

It’s March, winter has gone, the trees
   are in bud and Time’s scent is sweet.
   Spring has dressed the earth in a patterned
......
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Current Issue: January - February 2026
PN Review 287

To travel both and be one traveller…
Muriel Spark and Katherine Mansfield Give Life Lessons on Poetry in Prose
Kirsty Gunn In Munich recently, en route to Bayreuth for Wagner and performances of that particular iteration of Wissenschaft, I was startled to see, passing before me on the other side of the street, a line of three barefoot boys in wetsuits all carrying surfboards. Their hair was damp and their boards clearly just out of the water. But how? Where was the beach? The sea? We were in the middle of a landlocked city in Bavaria, an urban criss-cross of grand squares and two-lane expressways… Where was the wave? The boys’ profiles as they passed before me – elbows at an angle and their boards pointing forward, bare feet flat on the ground, heel to toe – were elongated and purposeful as the drawings of pharaohs on the walls of Egyptian tombs. Who were they?......
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Cover of Issue 287 of PNR
PN Review will be a monument to the moment when [...] England sought a redefinition of itself through the recovery of its autonomous cultural history, and sought to re-make the nation according to the programmes of its unacknowledged legislators.
Cairns Craig Times Literary Supplement
 
Since we started as Poetry Nation, a twice-yearly hardback, in 1973, we've been publishing new poetry, rediscoveries, commentary, literary essays, interviews and reviews from around the globe. In 2023 PN Review celebrated its jubilee.

Our vast archive now includes over 280 issues, with contributions from some of the most exciting and radical writers of our times. Key contributors include Octavio Paz, Laura Riding, Christopher Middleton, John Ashbery, Les Murray, Patricia Beer, W.S. Graham, Eavan Boland, Jorie Graham, Donald Davie, C.H. Sisson, Sinead Morrissey, Sasha Dugdale, Anthony Vahni Capildeo, and many others.
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From the Archive

Tony Harrison in Conversation Clive Wilmer
At the heart of Tony Harrison's recent play, The Trackers of Oxyrhynchus, is his version of a fragmentary satyr play by Sophocles. But in Harrison's adaptation the Chorus of Satyrs - still goat-like and phallic, to be sure - is transformed into a squad of beery, North-Country clog-dancers. It is perhaps an attempt at resolving the conflict at the core of Harrison's work - between his polyglot erudition and his roots in working-class Leeds, between classical culture and class culture. Harrison has degrees in Classics and in Linguistics, has travelled all over the world and is conversant with several modern languages, including Hausa and Czech. Yet the more he travels in his art, the more insistently he returns to his home territory, where he finds himself cut off from his class, his family and - most ironically - the ... READ MORE

Readers' Choices

Rebecca Watts

The Cult of the Noble Amateur

(PN Review 239)

Rory Waterman

Remarkable Coincidences

(PN Review 286)

Stav Poleg

The Banquet

(PN Review 279)

Eavan Boland

A Lyric Voice at Bay

(PN Review 121)

Stav Poleg

The Citadel of the Mind

(PN Review 276)

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