Known for a poetry both experimental, "activist," and lyrical that
reinvents the pastoral, John Kinsella considers his and his family's
life at Jam Tree Gully, in the Western Australian wheatbelt, and his
deeply felt ecological concerns in this new cycle of poems about place,
landscape, home, and absence. Part One, "Internal Exile," explores
issues of departure and return as well as alienation in Jam Tree Gully.
Part Two, "Inside Out," reevaluates how Kinsella and his family deal
with ideas of "space" and proximity while also looking out into the
wider world. How do we read an ecology as refuge? What lines of
communication with the outside world need to be kept open? As Paul Kane
observed in World Literature Today, "In Kinsella's poetry . . . are
lands marked by isolation and mundane violence and by a terrible
transcendent beauty."