Welcome to the Yet To Be Named Free Press website where you will stumble across links to our paperbacks, free eBooks, contact information and news about projects soon to be brought to life and scattered into the air without ego, prejudice or the chance of contamination.


26/01/2013

Ebook format

For the sake of simplicity we are now only providing our ebooks in flip book format from Calameo, however the pdf can be downloaded from the menu at the top of the viewing window.

25/01/2013

Dream Language {for 3 voices} by Hannah Mahoney, Brendan Slater & Jack Galmitz published

This new book goes not gently into the rugged terrain of dreams.  Here we are soon falling into a Dream Language {for 3 voices}, where sharper travails of identity are led by the creatures of archetypal realms whose very appearance may signify a path of transformation.  In this language, parents are the givers of more than the usual human inheritance; they burden the dream-self within doorless rooms.  And here, too, water is never far: falling as snuffing snow, drowning emerging steps, only rarely comforting the dream journeyer.  The three voices are not attributed to their authors, thus making of our reading an even more varied dream language, grammars challenging our temporal world, and wisdom sought through alchemy’s fundamental elements—earth, water, air, fire.  The periodic illustrations confirm the disequilibrium of dream journeying.  If transformative haiku interests you, this book will soon enter your favorite reads, perhaps even engage your own dream language within the REM-cycle hallowed halls where becoming calls.

23/01/2013

Catch 41 by Colin Stewart Jones published

Catch 41 is not Basho’s old frog pond nor is it Crapsey’s cinquains or Robert Kelly’s lunes. No, this is something entirely new with a twist of the familiar. This is not the stripped back, neutral English of most haiku either; Colin’s voice comes through loud and clear. For a keen haiku poet such as myself, reading Catch 41 was a shock to the system, but of the best kind. Is this a fairly dramatic, possible reworking of the form, the ghost of haiku future maybe? Or are we seeing a new poetic form entirely? This work moves from the sublime to the grounded and funny, from wild life to the love life smoothly and with great finesse. The writing is engaging and playful. This work is one you will treasure, go back to time and again and it may possibly inspire other writers to explore this emergent form. 
 

16/01/2013

Yellow Light by Jack Galmitz published

Yellow Light is a stunning collection of short verse tackling the subject of mental illness. Galmitz cleverly leads the reader down a seldom-trodden path, and like a tour guide of the mind, points out the landmarks of a troubled psyche. His use of rich imagery draws the reader in but in no way disturbs or upsets, he simply tells us a story, one that is often overlooked, forgotten and avoided.

05/01/2013

Parallels on Amazon

Parallels by Johannes S. H. Bjerg available on Amazon.

£6.00 @ Amazon.co.uk
€7.50 @ Amazon.eu

02/01/2013

Parallels Published

Parallels by Johannes S. H. Bjerg is now available from Createspace.

Parallels is a unique take on English Language Haiku. The poems are formatted side by side leaving the reader a choice, to read the pieces as a complete poem or as fragments of poems, each adding to the other. On first read the book may appear as a surrealist work, but after careful study Bjerg's humanity shines through. A must for haiku lovers. A brilliant example of the evolution of short-verse.

It will be available through Amazon later this week.
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