Reviews For previous work: 'No-one reading her poetry could doubt Ayachi's determination to experience life as acutely as possible. Despite the prevalence of ghostly figures and spiritual voices, her poetry smacks of living life to the full and encapsulates the world from a whole host of different angles.' [...] Unlike many modern poets who have a tendency to use minimal or plain words in an interesting fashion, Ayachi uses all words in all fashions, in layers of baroque inspired language which tangle together to form visceral images and visions. [...] Janette Ayachi lends poetry a gothic glamour as a sort of linguistic dark fairy with an innate Scottish ability to handle hard-core liquor - quite frankly a role that urgently needed filling in the contemporary poetry landscape.'
Rhona Scullion, For Booksake
'A history of 'charred loves' evolves here in the nervy, attentive poems of Janette Ayachi. New York, LA, Barcelona, Las Vegas and Amsterdam are the haunted rooms that the poet explores. Their various cultures shape her forms and images, but it is the relationships that sustain interest, redolent with passion and its aftermaths.'
Amy Wack, Editor of Seren
'As Janette Ayachi started to read, I felt the world open out before me. Her poems ranged from Venice to Barcelona, to the Adriatic Sea, to airports, 'where the choked heart unclogs itself.' She spoke with the uninhibited wanderlust of someone who is utterly in love with travel, and by the time her reading ended, I thought my own wanderlust couldn't get any more pronounced.'
StAnza
'Janette Ayachi uses words in a rich, painterly way to create layer upon layer of images that are both moving and evocative. Her work draws the reader into different worlds, allowing us to experience these worlds with all our senses.'
Pippa Goldschmidt
'There is a searching for and an absence of self-expression; the book [navigates] a tension between suppression and exuberance. [...] My palate was cleansed with uncluttered writing and startlingly precise observations. [...] Major and minor biographical details merge to give the reader a flavour, as if information has been gathered from overhearing family conversations or browsing through photo albums.'
Josephine Corcoran, Under the Radar and Nine Arches Press
'Janette Ayachi unpacks a glittering word-hoard. Her poems range from her Algerian Heritage, including a problematic relationship with her father, to the birth of her daughters, and the ageing and deaths of relatives. These subjects aren't kept apart but flow into one another, and running through them all, like an electric current, are frank, joyful celebrations of desire... Characters are brought to life within their own cultural orbs... The gorgeousness of Ayachi's language, its multitude of vivid details, sweep the reader along. Dorothy Yamamotot, Artemis Poetry