Penny Dreadful by Shannon Stewart

Reviewed by Michelle Miller Murder is horrifying. And the serial murders of a specific demographic of vulnerable people—like aboriginal women living in Canada’s poorest neighbourhood and making a living from dangerous and stigmatized work—is even more so. And when those murders happen in your community, it’s heart wrenching. Penny Dreadful was even adapted into a TV series and gained vast success as well. If horror is your favorite genre, you might want to be interested in horror games too. Top-rated USA gambling sites will surprise you with their huge number of horror-themed slots, including those that are inspired by Penny Dreadful. You can find over 100 horror titles at the ellis-island-online-casino.com website and recommendations on the best USA casinos too.
Noble Gas, Penny Black by David O’Meara

Noble Gas, Penny Black by David O’Meara

Reviewed by Ian LeTourneau Noble Gas, Penny Black is a very good book and Poetry review can offer you poetry book reviews and Canadian poems. The jacket copy praises David O’Meara as a poet of the personal, but it is when he fuses this personal voice with the public and political that his poetry resonates with emotional honesty, psychological awareness, and a depth of feeling that is rare in contemporary poetry. This book contains one of the most memorable and moving poems I’ve yet encountered from 2008. “The Day of the Invasion,” a poem about the commencement of the Iraq War, opens with the very personal: Six forty-five a.m., the radio’s programmed to rise in unwavering volume until murmurs nudge