A captivating and poignant new collection of poetry from Griffin
Poetry Prize winner Roo Borson that probes some of our most important
questions.
After Roo Borson's two previous collections -- Short Journey Upriver
Toward Oishida and Rain; road; an open boat -- set the seasons in
motion, focusing the poet's mind on time, mortality, transience, and
absence, Cardinal in the Eastern White Cedar arrives to complete the
triptych. From the glittering, classically rendered image to a
freighted, lucid, narrative line, Borson's voice can shift and refract
while holding true to the momentary facts of the shifting, given world.
Her meditations are a kind of fidelity to inquiry, to attachment, to
what can't be fully known. Here the distant past collides with the near
future, the present opens suddenly into another age, and friendship
becomes the measure of time's salience. These poems depict what
vanishes, the various modest homes where half-remembered lives all flow
toward their common end. Roo Borson has crowned a sustained achievement
with a work of startling intimacy and vividness.