In forget thee, Dreiblatt's first full-length book of poetry, an
anonymous narrator ruminates on the end of the world, while conversing
with various historic and literary figures from the ancient
Mediterranean and Mesopotamian worlds. Going behind writing to start
language afresh, they observe together how often worlds end; how
language is the register in time of our answerability to each other; how
writing, sociality, play, violence, and transcendence flow together into
the vexed semi-coherence we have come to call culture.