Review In her first book, Kristina Brodbeckproves exceedingly capable of evoking the life-unraveling disease of Alzheimerโs, in which her poems confront a haunting spirit of memory. They are blunt, wise, raucous, sometimes darkly-humorous, and profoundly moving poems. Brodbeck exhumes every ounce of love and willpower she can to allow a daughter-speaker to chronicle what pain, absence, confusion, and even those luminous moments of healing actually mean, when one is faced with a loved oneโs debilitation. Yet, this framework catapults Play into far greater poetic territoryโsuch bold, triumphant writing about motherhood, children, marriage, work, and living that youโll yearn for more of Kristina Brodbeckโs poems once you read this stunning collection.ย ย ย Jeffrey Hillard, Professor of English, Mount St. Joseph Universityย In Play, Kristina Brodbeck builds an exquisite labyrinth of remembering and forgetfulness as the narrator witnesses her motherโs erasure due to Alzheimerโs. These poems are pathways on which children and parents encounter each other in a maze of memories and dead-ends. Emerging along this circuitous route are astonishing portraits of love, grief, betrayal, and grace. Play is a powerful collection that burns itself into the readerโs memory while questioning its very power to do so.ย ย ย Dr. Jessica Hindman, Assistant Professor of English and Creative Writing at Northern Kentuckyย ย ย ย Universityย These are brave and beautiful poems about being the caretaker of a mother with Alzheimerโs and trying to be a mother and a wife while dealing with the heartache of loss. There are so many moments to pause for, like when the speaker visits her motherโs old church and wonders if the โplaster walls trapped her breathโ and how the motherโs โso sorry, so sorry, soโฆsorrys are really the calls of crows.โ And while the violence of Alzheimerโs takes the mother away and the speaker longs for โthe night where the body of your house takes you back,โ there is also the violence of animal slaughter where โa thousand cows come together in one hamburgerโ and of polar icecaps melting and of rainforest depletion and of bad mothers populating the news with stories of abuse, with a coroner who counts โthe cigarette burns, the bruises too.โ Yet through all of this, we are given transcendence in the form of language where we can watch a bee โpollinateโ a โmemory houseโ and a person can โslip into an elevator inโ a โdream.โ These poems feel essential, urgent, and wise. An amazing first collection.ย ย ย Kelly Moffett, Graduate Director, Coordinator of Creative Writing, Associate Professor of English,ย ย ย ย Northern Kentucky University About the Author Kristina Nichole Brodbeck's poetry has been published or is forthcoming in The Cape Rock, For a Better World 2017 and 2018, Calliope, and The Oddville Press. This collection written in response as a witness to her mother's battle with Early-Onset Alzheimer's. Kristina has an MA in English and teaches English Composition and Literature at Mount St. Joseph University and Cincinnati State.