Award-winning poet Maya C. Popa suggests that our restless desires are
inseparable from our mortality in this pressing and precise collection.
Rooting out profound meaning in language to wrench us from the moorings
of the familiar and into the realm of the extraordinary, the volume
asks, how do we articulate what's by definition inarticulable? Where
does sight end and imagination begin?
Lucid and musically rich, these poems sound an appeal to a dwindling
natural world and summon moments from the lives of literary
forbearers--John Milton's visit to Galileo, a vase broken by Marcel
Proust--to unveil fresh wonder in the unlikely meetings of the past.
Popa dramatizes the difficulties of loving a world that is at once rich
with beauty and full of opportunities for grief, and reveals that the
natural arc of wonder, from astonishment to reflection, more deeply
connects us with our humanity.