Format: E-magazine
Publication Date: December 2025
Part of the IHRAM Literary Magazine Series
Reviews from our Community
Quarter 4 Literary Magazine
Having a place to call home is a privilege that many of us take for granted. For some, the right to housing and shelter often seems like a hopeless struggle to remedy. The authors and artists in Stories on the Move document personal experiences and depict reflections on homelessness through lyrical narratives and affirming poetry. These stories brim with glimmers of hope, unveiling the realities of housing adversities while also reinforcing a deep resilience for a better life. Featuring sixteen writers and four artists, this magazine provides a heartwarming and empathetic insight into the lives of the unhoused.
Quarter 4 Literary Magazine
Having a place to call home is a privilege that many of us take for granted. For some, the right to housing and shelter often seems like a hopeless struggle to remedy. The authors and artists in Stories on the Move document personal experiences and depict reflections on homelessness through lyrical narratives and affirming poetry. These stories brim with glimmers of hope, unveiling the realities of housing adversities while also reinforcing a deep resilience for a better life. Featuring sixteen writers and four artists, this magazine provides a heartwarming and empathetic insight into the lives of the unhoused.
Format: E-magazine
Publication Date: December 2025
Part of the IHRAM Literary Magazine Series
Reviews from our Community
"In ‘Stories on the Move: Voices of the Unhoused’, IHRAM Press assembles vastly divergent ways of conceptualising home, shelter, nostalgia and belonging which are alternately fixed and fluid: from roots holding one to a place of origin, to family and other forms of attachment carried by memory and relationships. How do notions of emplacement and displacement resonate with artists and writers from opposite sides of the world — from Canada to Cyprus, from Malta to the Philippines, from Nigeria to Uruguay.
As far as our sense of home and the fate of our fragile blue planet can be understood in parallel, we may wonder nonetheless if humanity will ever realise what we stand to lose until it has been utterly destroyed.”