"In Stars Burn Regardless, Jean O'Brien writes as a seer, with a
vision that travels beneath and through the worlds she inhabits. With
stunning language and original voice, she travels the edges of things:
the earth/sea/sky--the bones/bodies/ash. These relentless poems,
sometimes liquid, sometimes standing straight up on hard ground, shift
into the unfathomable and unspeakable as they name the deaths of up to
800 children whose bodies were dumped in a septic tank at the Mother &
Baby Home in Tuam, County Galway: Ragged bundles of stick bones tiny as
dolls and skulls/the size of tennis balls... O'Brien is a writer who
writes the threshold, and then opens the door to shifting
transformations of the body and its place on the planet, never backing
down from the fevers and the ecstasies." - Jan Beatty, The Body Wars -
University of Pittsburgh Press
"These poems rise to their occasion, they are tough, tender, generous,
passionate and deeply engaged--I cannot recommend Stars Burn
Regardless highly enough." - Mark Roper, poet and librettist