This new selection of poems by Paula Meehan resonates with integrity and
sympathy. The poet moves from the feminist to the ecological, from the
grittier urban spaces of the north side of center-city Dublin to the
suburban spaces outside, never leaving the former behind while weaving
the gathering themes in a compassionate web. Meehan writes evocatively
about gender and class, never losing sight of the lyric purpose of her
poems. She blends the comic and tragic as many Irish writers before her
have done. In Meehan's poetry, particularly her most recent volumes,
nature has historical and personal significance, but it also functions
on its own terms. Meehan endeavors to examine the places, public and
private, where nature and culture meet. At this intersection she begins
to make sense of the suffering of innocents and the powerless, to chart
avenues toward liberation, and to salve their psychological and physical
wounds by finding poetry in the disappearance and reappearance of the
natural world.