Nathaniel Tarn's newest collection of poems, Ins and Outs of the Forest
Rivers, dives deep into the spiritual and physical sufferings of our
global age. After a moving overture, the book unfolds in five sections:
"Of the Perfected Angels," with its lucid meditation on Issenheim
altarpiece by Matthias Grünewald; "Dying Trees," written out of the
horrible loss of hundreds of thousands of trees throughout the American
West in recent years; "War Stills," an engagement with the ongoing
atrocities in Iraq; "Movement / North of the Java Sea," taking flight
from Maui to Bali to Papua New Guinea; and the final section "Sarawak,"
snaking its way through the river and indigenous anguish of Borneo,
where Tarn as poet-anthropologist surveyed the loss of forest lands and
its effects on tribal peoples.