OF WATER NEVER CEASING is a poetry collection written from within the lived realities of chronic illness, treatment, and survival. Across these poems, Kristin Entler traces how the body becomes a site of ongoing care, interruption, and endurance, and how daily life reshapes itself around medical systems, fatigue, and uncertainty.
Structured as a sustained sequence rather than a single arc, the collection moves through hospitals, exam rooms, homes, and moments of waiting. Entler writes with precision about diagnosis and treatment, but also about what happens outside the clinical frame: friendships strained by unpredictability, intimacy altered by pain, and the quiet labor of staying oriented to the present. The poems attend to bodily processes with clarity and restraint, resisting metaphor where it would soften the facts.
Throughout the book, water functions as both presence and necessity. Hydration, infusion, flooding, and depletion recur not as symbols of cleansing or rebirth, but as markers of survival. The title reflects the book's insistence on continuation rather than cure. This is not a narrative of recovery, but of persistence within conditions that do not resolve.
OF WATER NEVER CEASING also interrogates the language surrounding illness. Medical terminology, spiritual shorthand, and well-meaning consolation are tested against lived experience. Entler writes from within these systems while refusing their simplifications, insisting on accuracy, attention, and dignity.
The final poems remain grounded in the ongoing nature of care. There is no closing gesture toward restoration. Instead, the collection affirms the daily work of living inside a body that demands vigilance and adaptation, and the quiet resilience required to keep showing up.
In this remarkable debut, Kristin Entler offers a clear-eyed, unsentimental account of illness as a way of life, and of care as something practiced, imperfectly and continually, over time.
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Poetry