Overview


A collection of poetry exploring grief, injustice, motherhood, and the possibility of hope through action.

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Description


This collection shares stories in verse collected from the weeks leading up to the coronavirus pandemic through the five years that followed. It reveals layers of grief, futility, rage and hope of raising children in America while trying to self-parent through an endless string of "unprecedented events." Each poem shares a piece of the experience of being a woman, a child, a friend and a mother through the isolation of the first years of the shut down and the gradual reemergence into a world much changed. This collection explores the weight of loneliness while embracing the possibility of transformation. Every person had to walk their own path through those years. These poems pull at the strings that bring us together.
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About The Author


After teaching and working in early education for a decade, Maria Mankin has published six books with Pilgrim Press and four novels in the Rev and Rye Series, published by Brain Mill Press, with a fifth due out in November 2026. She is also a co-author of Circ, a mystery set in Skegness England, published by Pigeon Park Press, and Pitching Our Tents: Poetry of Hospitality. She is a regular contributor to Living Psalms, a collection in which the Psalms are reinterpreted in poetry and art as a reflection of God's work of justice and compassion. 

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Book details

  • Genre:poetry
  • Sub-genre:Subjects & Themes / Family
  • Language:English
  • Pages:84
  • eBook ISBN:9798317828707
  • Paperback ISBN:9798317828691

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