Brynn Saito takes her readers on a journey with her father to the desert
prison of Manzanar where, over 80 years ago, her grandparents met and
made a life together. Born of an unquenchable desire to animate the
shadow archive, Saito's poetry sings a song of rage, confusion, and,
ultimately, love; descendants of wartime incarceration exchange dreams,
mothers become water goddesses, and a modern daughter haunts future
ruins. Mystical inclinations, yellow cedars, and sisterhood make a balm
for trauma's scars. This work opens a dialogue between the past and
present, radical ancestor and future child, desert prison and family
garden.