The poems in A Wound On Stone by Faye George reflect the emotional history of a woman who grew up during the Great Depression and World War II, knowing many forms of political and personal hardship. Taken together the poems tell the story of coming to terms with loss and are a cry to regain meaning and personal identity. A Wound On Stone ends with the paradoxical understanding that although they may never heal, "wounds wear out." One must go on, not with hope's illusions, but with a bitterly won and liberating consciousness. These are poems of keen observation by a woman longing to be more than just an observer.
George uses haunting, evocative images that move from passionate and open to tight and hushed, particularly the image of a mother wrapping a child in a blanket of nettles. As former Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets, Daniel Hoffman, says, "It is a pleasure to come on a poet as accomplished and assured as is Faye George." A Wound On Stone is an elegantly presented book filled with magical language and apt references to mythology.
