How can a person come to understand wars and hatreds well enough to
explain them truthfully to a child? The Bower engages this timeless
and thorny question through a recounting of the poet-speaker's year in
Belfast, Northern Ireland, with her young daughter. The speaker immerses
herself in the history of Irish politics--including the sectarian
conflict known as The Troubles--and gathers stories of a painful,
divisive past from museum exhibits, newspapers, neighbors, friends,
local musicians, and cabbies. Quietly meditative, brooding, and
heart-wrenching, these poems place intimate moments between mother and
daughter alongside images of nationalistic violence and the angers that
underlie our daily interactions. A deep dive into sectarianism and
forgiveness, this timely and nuanced book examines the many ways we are
all implicated in the impulse to "protect our own" and asks how we
manage the histories that divide us.