I Could Be So Good For You: A photographic record of North London
To accompany the ground-breaking new book I Could Be So Good For You: A Portrait of the North London Working Class, by John Medhurst, Repeater
To accompany the ground-breaking new book I Could Be So Good For You: A Portrait of the North London Working Class, by John Medhurst, Repeater
As we celebrate Earth Day 2023, we would like to share an interview with Lesley-Ann Brown, who shares her experiences as an educator, what inspired
Lesley-Ann Brown’s tribute is published in The Repeater Book of Heroism (2022). Her new memoir, Blackgirl on Mars, was published in February 2023. Both Blackgirl on
In May we had a launch party for The Repeater Book of Heroism at Vout-O-Reenee’s in Aldgate, celebrating the work of all our contributors, who
Ahead of the launch of Ramzy Alwakeel’s new book, How We Used Saint Etienne to Live, we went to Glastonbury to see the band play,
There’s often an understandably knee-jerk reaction to critical writing about alcohol. After all, experiments with prohibition have largely been a racist and anti-poor disaster, while
In his book The Dream and the Underworld, James Hillman discusses two placements of the hero. One is as the Herculean ego, very much our
The conflict in Ukraine has now settled into the worst kind of dynamic for children and their families: intensive aerial bombardment of urban areas. Attacks
In this blog, author Grafton Tanner takes us through some of his most cherished texts which influenced his new book; The Hours Have Lost Their Clock.
To mark the publication of DEEP SNIFF, enjoy author Adam Zmith’s dedicated reading list featuring: 📚Gay Pioneers: How DRUMMER Magazine Shaped Gay Popular Culture 1965-1999,
From railway adventures to prosaic partying; as this Summer draws to a close, Team Repeater offer some of their favourite sunshine reads. Josh The
Back in July, we celebrated our 100th birthday (of sorts) with the publication of Cynthia Cruz’s The Melancholia of Class – a multidisciplinary polemic which