“Yes, and…” – A Review of the Crested Tit Collective’s Rewilding Anthology

he anthology’s ‘Introduction’ offers the reader dozens of possible responses to the prompt ‘Rewilding is’, and the dedication gestures to a wide inclusivity: ‘To the trees, the seas, the soil, the birds, the ice, the clouds, the flowers, the amphibians, the rivers, the weeds, the mammals, the rocks, the sand, the hills, the pebbles, the fish, the mountains, the deserts, the islands, the insects, the heather, the reptiles, the grasses, the tides, the mist, the valleys, the lakes, the, the, the’.

“The Natural World as a Core of Poetics”: An Interview with Marvin Thompson

Thompson recently gained attention when his amazing sestina “Triptych”, commenting on the installing of a plaque commemorating slave trader Thomas Phillips, was published by The Outposted Project (the plaque was shortly after torn down). Spanning generations of trauma across tightly woven stanzas, “Triptych” epitomises much of the skill Thompson shows in his debut collection Road Trip in his ability to thread his personal experiences of racism across the band of Britain’s post-war colonial legacy.