Nicholas Taylor-Collins in front of a bookshelf

Nicholas Taylor-Collins

Literary researcher | Creative reader

Tag: postmodernism

  • Exhaustion and exhaustive: Colum McCann’s ‘Apeirogon’

    Exhaustion and exhaustive: Colum McCann’s ‘Apeirogon’

    Colum McCann’s Apeirogon (Bloomsbury, 2020) is a novel. I know this because it tells me both on the cover of the hardback edition, and in the acknowledgements. In the latter, McCann explains that this is a hybrid novel with invention at its core, a work of storytelling which, like all storytelling, weaves together elements of…

  • (Post-)postmodernist elegy: Stephen Sexton’s ‘If All the World and Love Were Young’

    (Post-)postmodernist elegy: Stephen Sexton’s ‘If All the World and Love Were Young’

    Stephen Sexton’s If All The World and Love Were Young (Penguin, 2019) has proven phenomenally successful, having won the Forward Prize for Best First Collection and being shortlisted for the International Dylan Thomas Prize. And yet, it is not an easy poetry collection, proving both difficult in terms of its style and allusive references, and…

  • Not quite everything: ‘Fatherhood’ by Caleb Klaces

    Not quite everything: ‘Fatherhood’ by Caleb Klaces

    The question of form may never be resolved. Is the novel better than poetry? Are short stories just novel-lite? In Fatherhood (Prototype, 2019), Caleb Klaces avoids that scrutiny completely by mixing two of those forms together. Fatherhood combines ‘prose and poetry in an experimental work of verse fiction’. The text tells the story of Caleb…