The landscape of Ritual and Bit is littered with the speaker's past:
empty 40s, old posters, family lies, and fragmented missives. Internal
struggles play out in the detritus of long-ago. Yet even as the speaker
attempts to cautiously map his movements, effect a survival, and
navigate beyond his past, he faces emotional fissures wrought by the
present. Throughout the book, he restlessly searches for ways to regain
control of his life, partly through ceremonies, prayers, and devotions,
and partly through lyrical force. The danger is palpable among wolves
and claws, boxcutter and jackknife. There's both caution here and a
willingness to abandon caution if anything or anyone could be reached.
The poems ask, What makes a home? What should we expect when we are so
determined to live in a world where everything is disappearing?