About This Book
A sequence of short, often aphoristic prose pieces blends lyrical imagery, parable, and sharp social critique to examine mortality, decay, and inner alienation. Recurrent motifs—withered plants, winter skies, graves, and exhausted travelers—serve as metaphors for failed hopes, ethical ambiguity, and the erosion of communal bonds. Voices shift between ironic detachment and weary compassion, moving through dreamlike vignettes, polemic sketches, and introspective meditations. The collection’s fragmented, poem-like prose foregrounds doubt and moral questioning while probing possibilities of endurance, protest, and quiet witness amid bleak circumstances.
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