Seedlings Pamphlets Summer Launch

£4.00

Come along to Burley Fisher (400 Kingsland Rd) on 6:30-9 on 28 July, for the launch of our summer series of pamphlets. We will have readings, music performances, and a panel chat with all the authors.

Details:

28 July 2026

6:30-9pm (performances from 7)

Burley Fisher bookshop

400 Kingsland Road, London

Ticket options:

£4 standard entry (£2 conc.)

£10 ticket includes one of the pamphlets of your choice on the night (save £4!) — ‘Add-on’ button at bottom of this page, and sellect ‘Store pickup / Collection’ as shipping option.

Seedlings Pamphlets is a new series of single-author handmade editions, exploring our place in the world by exciting emerging voices.


The pamphlets are:

Sophie Fletcher – Swine Mourn for Their Losses

In Sophie Fletcher’s raw, sensuous and glistening tale Swine Mourn for Their Losses, grief returns Zośka to childhood. From an enchanted farm-world of pigs and hens, wildflowers and leaf-caves, the young girl learns her bearings from her mother’s love. In a rush of nostalgic memories gleaming like mica, we witness the subtle and poignant cycle of grief as the adult Zofia loses her mother, with sections numbered in reverse order. Throughout the motif of swine – as her favourite animal, her pet name – creates a bond between mother and daughter, world and figure. The fragments that shore up the story flow like Virginia Woolf’s ‘moments of being’, their range and intensity is reminiscent of Olga Tokarczuk’s Flights or Clarice Lispector’s Near to the Wild Heart, but the hurried, grieving, marvelling voice is Fletcher’s alone.

A tender and intense tale, rich in curiosity and craft, healing and memory

– Will J. Wood

Quincy Saul – Utah, 2025

Quincy Saul’s Utah, 2025 is a transcendent tale blending nature- and travel-writing, poetry and polemic. Wandering the North American West with a notebook, a flute and the works of his beloved authors Edward Abbey, Martin Prechtel, and Everett Ruess, it is an adventure in words and rocks. Saul takes his personal pain into the ‘profuse pantheon’ of the wilderness, far from the ‘megamurdering megamachine’ of civilisation. He finds layers of knowledge, traditions, geology and ancient rock art, and the more these old ways draw him in, the more his pen is sharpened to denounce the idea of development. Witnessing this development in the long tradition of the exploitation and destruction of nature and native communities, Saul’s writing is as full of grief as wonder. This is a piece of work that asks what it is to be a travel writer, to be human and begs us, what will you fight to protect?
— Will J. Wood

Millie Woodrow – Venus in the Forest

A sensual and spellbinding tale of loss and love. Millie Woodrow’s Venus in the Forest wades knee-deep into the organic matter of poetic language with a dark and arching tenderness. Intertwining myth and fantasy, Woodrow traces shapeshifting bodies around the ghosts of grief and memories. The skin of words in Venus are dripping wet with salt and earth – finding solace in the heart of the forest. A mesmerising read.

— Alessia Fenwick


Spencer Wood – fain

Inspired by Keats’ unfinished Hyperion epics, Spencer Wood’s fain explores the world-reshaping power of queer intimacy. Accompanied by beguiling semi-abstract line drawings by Ben Skinner, these devotional poems are unabashedly romantic without becoming saccharine. Ethereal domestic bliss clashes with apocalyptic anxiety; the grotesquerie of dead rats brushes up against the innuendo of back garden ejaculation. Messy, tender, modern and timeless, Wood’s voice imagines new forms of belonging.

Subtle humour, vivid imagery, sweet and dark as treacle. An eco-erotic joy to read.

Harper Walton, author of Midnight Movies

Type:

Come along to Burley Fisher (400 Kingsland Rd) on 6:30-9 on 28 July, for the launch of our summer series of pamphlets. We will have readings, music performances, and a panel chat with all the authors.

Details:

28 July 2026

6:30-9pm (performances from 7)

Burley Fisher bookshop

400 Kingsland Road, London

Ticket options:

£4 standard entry (£2 conc.)

£10 ticket includes one of the pamphlets of your choice on the night (save £4!) — ‘Add-on’ button at bottom of this page, and sellect ‘Store pickup / Collection’ as shipping option.

Seedlings Pamphlets is a new series of single-author handmade editions, exploring our place in the world by exciting emerging voices.


The pamphlets are:

Sophie Fletcher – Swine Mourn for Their Losses

In Sophie Fletcher’s raw, sensuous and glistening tale Swine Mourn for Their Losses, grief returns Zośka to childhood. From an enchanted farm-world of pigs and hens, wildflowers and leaf-caves, the young girl learns her bearings from her mother’s love. In a rush of nostalgic memories gleaming like mica, we witness the subtle and poignant cycle of grief as the adult Zofia loses her mother, with sections numbered in reverse order. Throughout the motif of swine – as her favourite animal, her pet name – creates a bond between mother and daughter, world and figure. The fragments that shore up the story flow like Virginia Woolf’s ‘moments of being’, their range and intensity is reminiscent of Olga Tokarczuk’s Flights or Clarice Lispector’s Near to the Wild Heart, but the hurried, grieving, marvelling voice is Fletcher’s alone.

A tender and intense tale, rich in curiosity and craft, healing and memory

– Will J. Wood

Quincy Saul – Utah, 2025

Quincy Saul’s Utah, 2025 is a transcendent tale blending nature- and travel-writing, poetry and polemic. Wandering the North American West with a notebook, a flute and the works of his beloved authors Edward Abbey, Martin Prechtel, and Everett Ruess, it is an adventure in words and rocks. Saul takes his personal pain into the ‘profuse pantheon’ of the wilderness, far from the ‘megamurdering megamachine’ of civilisation. He finds layers of knowledge, traditions, geology and ancient rock art, and the more these old ways draw him in, the more his pen is sharpened to denounce the idea of development. Witnessing this development in the long tradition of the exploitation and destruction of nature and native communities, Saul’s writing is as full of grief as wonder. This is a piece of work that asks what it is to be a travel writer, to be human and begs us, what will you fight to protect?
— Will J. Wood

Millie Woodrow – Venus in the Forest

A sensual and spellbinding tale of loss and love. Millie Woodrow’s Venus in the Forest wades knee-deep into the organic matter of poetic language with a dark and arching tenderness. Intertwining myth and fantasy, Woodrow traces shapeshifting bodies around the ghosts of grief and memories. The skin of words in Venus are dripping wet with salt and earth – finding solace in the heart of the forest. A mesmerising read.

— Alessia Fenwick


Spencer Wood – fain

Inspired by Keats’ unfinished Hyperion epics, Spencer Wood’s fain explores the world-reshaping power of queer intimacy. Accompanied by beguiling semi-abstract line drawings by Ben Skinner, these devotional poems are unabashedly romantic without becoming saccharine. Ethereal domestic bliss clashes with apocalyptic anxiety; the grotesquerie of dead rats brushes up against the innuendo of back garden ejaculation. Messy, tender, modern and timeless, Wood’s voice imagines new forms of belonging.

Subtle humour, vivid imagery, sweet and dark as treacle. An eco-erotic joy to read.

Harper Walton, author of Midnight Movies