When her Florida apartment is damaged by the ferocity of Hurricane Irma,
Duhamel turns to Dante and terza rima, reconstructing the form into the
long poem "Terza Irma." Throughout the book she investigates our
near-catastrophic ecological and political moment, hyperaware of her own
complicity, resistance, and agency. She writes odes to her favorite
uncle--who was "green" before it was a hashtag--and Mother Nature via a
retro margarine commercial. She writes letters to her failing memory as
well as to America's amnesia. With fear of the water below and a burglar
who enters through her second story window, she bravely faces the story
under the story, the second story we often neglect to tell.