<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>In Kelly DuMar's <em>girl in tree bark</em>, the past, especially the life of the family of origin, acts as a kind of sap that provides nutrients for the photosynthesis that charges the poems. But the poems send their salubrious nourishment down to the past, which becomes transformed with the poem-making. The effect of the past on the present, and vice-versa, is not static; it is a reciprocally kinetic symbiosis, played out in fluent, daring narratives, in language keen with insight and liquid with sumptuous musicality. In almost every poem, a coupling of devastation and healing works a remarkable magic. -- <strong>Tom Daley</strong>, author of <em>House You Cannot Reach</em></p>
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