About This Book
A sequence of lyrical poems and short prose pieces meditates on the devastation and moral absurdities of modern war, portraying ruined towns, shattered cathedrals, battlefields, and the people who endure them. Vivid sensory detail and elegiac imagery show nature reclaiming wreckage while individuals register loss, resolve, and the persistence of everyday life. Several pieces adopt satiric or quietly reflective tones to question the justifications for violence and to record moments of grief, memory, and small human tenacity. The collection blends pastoral observation, solemn mourning, and ironic moral comment into compact, image-rich sketches.
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