These poems are shadowed by illness, both civic and personal, and by the mysterious currents of grief. What emerges over the course of the volume is a meditation not only on a daughter's relationship with her mother but also on a citizen's to her nation. Throughout, Once examines the forces that shape war, divorce, and death, exploring personal culpability and charting uncertain new beginnings as the speakers seek to build homes in a shattered land and find whole selves amid broken, thwarted relationships.
from "Frontier"
 
 . . . At times, 
 I felt sick, intoxicated
 by BPA and mercury.
 At other times I fasted and the stars
 stumbled clear from the vault.
 Up there, the universe stands around drunk.
 I hope the Lord is kind to us, 
 for we engrave our every mistake . . .
Related Subjects
Poetry