Stone's moving debut collection of verse is inspired by her encounter
with perhaps the last cohesive, traditional Jewish community in the
Middle East and North Africa. According to their story of origin, a
handful of exiles arrived on the island of Djerba, Tunisia, in 586 B.C.,
carrying a single stone from the destroyed Temple in Jerusalem. Drawing
from this cosmology, the poems follow a stranger who arrives into an
ancient community that is both at home and deeply estranged on the
island. Its people occupy the uneasy space of all insular communities,
deciding when to let the world in and when to shut it out. The poems are
about the daily lives and deeper cosmos of the Jews of Djerba as well as
the Muslims next door. In her exploration, Stone sees vivid recurring
images of keys, stones, homes, the laughter of girls, the eyes of men,
the color blue, and the force of blood or bombs. With this journey of
faith, doubt, longing, and home, Stone has brought readers a rare look
into a story that resonates powerfully with questions of cultural
preservation and coexistence.