Placed in the context of twentieth-century moral disaster--war,
genocide, the Holocaust, the atomic bomb--Forche's ambitious and
compelling third collection of poems is a meditation of memory,
specifically how memory survives the unimaginable. The poems reflect the
effects of such experience: the lines, and often the images within them,
are fragmented discordant. But read together, these lines become a
haunting mosaic of grief, evoking the necessary accommodations human
beings make to survive what is unsurvivable. As poets have always done,
Forche attempts to give voice to the unutterable, using language to keep
memory alive, relive history, and link the past with the future.