Author Archives: Bobby Seal

About Bobby Seal

Freelance writer, poet and psychogeographer

Underpass: A Sinister Turn

We live in a stocking which is in the process of being turned inside out, without our ever knowing for sure to what phase of the process our moment of consciousness corresponds.                                                       Vladimir Nabokov, Bend Sinister       … Continue reading

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Psychogeographic Review’s Books of the Year

Essex, the Fens, Suffolk, Sussex and London; 2018 has been a good year for books in which the landscape, be it the countryside or city streets, plays a prominent role. There is no such thing as psychogeographic fiction. However, there … Continue reading

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December 2018 Reviews

All Among the Barley – Melissa Harrison (Bloomsbury, 2018) This is Melissa Harrison’s third novel. With All Among the Barley and its two predecessors, Clay and At Hawthorn Time, she is establishing herself as one of the country’s foremost nature … Continue reading

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November 2018 Reviews

Books Crudo – Olivia Laing (Picador, 2018) Kathy Acker did not die in 1997. She, or someone very much like her, lives on to witness the recent rise of right-leaning populism in Europe and the United States and, when we … Continue reading

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October 2018 Reviews

Books Low Country: Brexit on the Essex Coast – Tom Bolton (Penned in the Margins, 2018) Think of Essex and what comes to mind? For many it will be Norman Tebbit, Teddy Taylor and that peculiarly Essex-led brand of working-class … Continue reading

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Fieldgate Street

Why can’t I write something that would awake the dead? That pursuit is what burns most deeply. Patti Smith Just Kids       The streets haunt you, just as echoes of you haunt them.  You walk past the bell … Continue reading

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Adventures at the End of the World: A Review of The Stone Tide by Gareth E. Rees

I have to confess that when I first heard that Gareth Rees was moving from his home in East London to the Sussex coastal resort of Hastings it seemed to me odd for a relatively young writer to be forsaking … Continue reading

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Winter 2017/18 Reviews

A collection of seasonal reading loosely connected by the themes of landscape, time and memory… The Last London: True Fictions from an Unreal City – Iain Sinclair This is the eighteenth and supposedly final chapter of Iain Sinclair’s London novel. … Continue reading

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A Bridge That Divides

A bridge that links and divides. Two nations, border country, and in my mind I’m so close to the edge. But fly-strewn water fills my mouth, and drowns all possible words. The water is warm and viscous, its whole surface … Continue reading

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The X-Site: Mendelssohn, Mustard Gas and Memory

The most wonderful and the strongest things in the world, you know, are just the things which no one can see. Charles Kingsley – The Water-Babies   We follow the river upstream, pressing on further than we’d ever walked before.  … Continue reading

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