Son of a Holocaust survivor, Jason Sommer writes of troubles that unfold
at the intersection of history made and personality in making, of self
and other; of wakefulness and sleep. His world is post-Holocaust, and
the poetic voice in this book is one which emerges from that calamity,
telling the stories of those who have finally begun to speak to him, and
now through him. As a survivor's child, Sommer must consider how to live
in the wake of history, among those who are indelibly marked by it.