Carol Barbour's new book of poetry is a heady concoction of sumptuous
beauty and dangerous relations. Characterized by a strong, rhythmic
cadence, the language is evocative of the beating heart which nudges at
the edge of being. Trauma is carefully negotiated, wrestling in a
precarious balance between memory and what remains inconceivable.
Barbour invites the reader to reflect on human frailty, and the inherent
desire to mend relations with others, and with oneself. The poems are
intricate ciphers, heroic missals, created to forestall the propensity
of life to come undone. An intimate and heroic collection, Infrangible
reveals the artist as a child, a woman, and a lover, in search of
meaning, union, and recognition.