"Webster's sensuous, memory-haunted collection is a celebration of life wrapped in an elegy. The book begins, 'You shawl me like smoke.' This seeds Webster's fascination with sheltering fog and disorienting mist and prompts poignant inquiry into images of enfolding and surrounding, shrouding and swaddling. Webster's speaker misses her deceased beloved and marvels over her infant daughter. 'My first word was look,' she declares, and hers are delving eyes. She sees nature as an enveloping, penetrating, and vital presence, and its perpetual motion infuses Webster's darting, whirling, gliding lines. Childhood memories embody a cellular affinity with nature, a sense of awe, while a poem of sickbed vigils, loss, and life's determined renewal is anchored to the sight of thriving ivy on a brick hospital wall. Webster announces, 'This world in its spiked beauty splits me,' and this sense of division, of the divide between sorrow and joy, life and death, subtly shapes her gracefully crafted, ardently observed poems in which vowels chime and consonants clang.
Nuanced and caring poems that reach from the immediate and intimate to the timeless and universal." --Donna Seaman, Booklist.