<i>'In her original poems, [Beverley Bie Brahic] characteristically moves towards compassionate celebration. Both the short lyrics and the more discursive narratives in her collections are richly and variously peopled, and the Mediterranean glow of generous physicality extends to fruits, flowers and an abundant natural world.'</i> - <b>Carol Rumens, <i>The Guardian</i></b><br /><br /><i>'In a relatively short career, Beverley Bie Brahic has already achieved critical acclaim as poet, translator and, at times, translator-poet. </i>White Sheets<i>, her second collection of poems, reveals a voice that somehow melds contradictory aspects: beguilingly elusive yet unabashed in its solidity, it exercises a curious fascination.' </i>- <b>Kit Toda, <i>The Times Literary Supplement</i></b><br /><br /><i>'Tenderness is also part of the erotic and sexual, about which Bie Brahic writes with singular, and non-sentimental, brilliance.'</i><br /><b>Ian Pople, <i>The Manchester Review</i></b>