In her third collection, Nicole Stellon O'Donnell explores the
landscapes of memory, argument, and wilderness. These poems deconstruct
memoir, dig at the roots of philosophical argumentation, and critique
the role of the poet as an observer of the natural world. From manicured
baseball fields to the debate podium, from the lobby of the public pool
to the hallowed Alaskan cabin where John Haines once sat down to write,
these poems push against the notion that the solitary self is the
arbiter of truth.