Reviews

sikfan glaschu by Sean Wai Keung

warehouseno8's review

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emotional funny hopeful reflective slow-paced

4.25

cbt00004's review

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emotional funny hopeful inspiring lighthearted reflective sad medium-paced

4.5

I bought this book to read after hearing the poet at a recital, his poems are beautiful. A real mix of happy and sad, and all in between. He faces racism, loneliness, family, loss and grief in the most beautiful ways and wraps it all up in the universal language of food.

sewing_writer's review

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funny inspiring reflective

5.0

fiendfull's review

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5.0

I was excited to read this collection as I loved Sean Wai Keung's poem in the Haunted Voices anthology, and it did not disappoint! The format of focusing on different Glasgow restaurants to explore identity, language, and authenticity worked really well ('tinto tapas' was one of my favourite poems in the collection and was very much on this theme) and gave a sense of travelling through the collection around Glasgow, thinking about who you are and where you belong. Some of the poems also explore lockdown, in terms of food and getting outside and also pandemic racism, and they had a wry yet relatable approach (especially 'wing rush' which is about whether anyone knows if you've already been out once that day) which I also really liked.

I love Sean Wai Keung's poetic style and these poems were clever and enjoyable, a fresh take on identity and what is authentic (cuisine or otherwise).

lunacarmona's review

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inspiring lighthearted reflective fast-paced

3.5

dyslexic_sanj's review

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5.0

What an incredible book! Sean really brings to life the cuisine scene of glasgow through such gorgoues and personal poetry. Related to so many things in this. I highly recommend this to any one in Glasgow, or poetry lovers

plantbot's review

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emotional funny hopeful inspiring lighthearted fast-paced

5.0

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