By Rachel Tribble
A moment of stillness. A breath of moonlight. A story to be read slowly.
Moon is a lyrical, meditative short story by multidisciplinary artist and writer Rachel Tribble. Winner of our monthly Flash Fiction competition, this powerful micro booklet invites you into a quiet, otherworldly moment, where the sky glows, the sea listens, and time seems to hold its breath.
Designed as a mindfulness reading experience, Moon is best read a line at a time, a slow breath per page. It’s a small book with big presence, perfect for pockets, calm corners, and anyone in need of a gentle pause.
By N. J. Simat
This intimate prose poem by N. J. Simat explores the quiet tension between instinct and compassion, cruelty and mercy. When a goose, a snake, and a human cross paths, their brief encounter becomes a lens through which the narrator examines the cost of kindness—and the contradictions we carry.
Told with lyrical precision and philosophical weight, Mother Goose and Her Kind Beast is a small but powerful meditation on moral reckoning, emotional inheritance, and the choices we make when no one is watching.
Perfect for readers of hybrid work, flash fiction, and experimental poetry.
By Daphne Harries
Three Strikes is a lyrical and haunting micro-booklet by Welsh and Australian poet Daphne Harries. Rooted in matriarchal memory, folklore and the emotional landscapes of mountains and water, this collection of three interconnected poems circles the Welsh folktale of Llyn y Fan Fach.
Each poem reflects a different echo of the myth: the strike of separation, the strike of memory and the strike of return. Together, they form a quiet braid of longing, inheritance and reclamation, exploring what we carry in our bodies, what we lose through distance and silence, and what the land remembers even when we forget.
Daphne’s voice feels both ancient and sharply contemporary. In these poems she revisits the mother at the lake’s edge, the pull of home that lives in the body, and the intimate relationships between language, identity and place. Lines linger long after reading, moving through folklore, family and the blurred spaces between what is inherited and what is reclaimed.
Daphne Harries is a Welsh and Australian poet currently studying English at Oxford. Her work often dwells on matriarchs, mountains and bogs, shaped by myth, land and memory. When she is not writing, she enjoys tea, fantasy literature and naps.
Three Strikes is part of the Lemon Pip micro-booklet series from Lemon Jelly Press.
By Jason Watts
A quiet ritual. A whispered tradition. A story carried on the hum of wings.
Pre-order Offer
Available now for £4.00 (RRP £5.00) until 1st April.
Telling the Bees is a beautifully crafted A6 micro booklet that draws on the old folklore practice of speaking to bees in times of loss, love, and change. In this delicate and evocative piece, Jason Watts explores memory, grief, and the fragile threads that connect us to the natural world.
Perfect for slipping into a pocket, gifting to a friend, or returning to in quiet moments, this micro booklet offers a brief but resonant reading experience—one that lingers long after the final page.
Printed in a compact A6 format, this edition is part of our micro booklet series: small in size, but rich in atmosphere and meaning.
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