Full Description
Time is slippery. At Some Point openly acknowledges this while exploring the intersections between past and present, childhood and adulthood, midlife and mortality. Joyously and solemnly tugging on the threads that connect us—to life, to the planet, to each other—David O'Connell finds meaning in the small things: vacation photos, middle school band concerts, and Halloween decorations. 
 
 An earworm, a sudden memory, the arrival of a fox in the neighborhood, even camaraderie among other patients awaiting colonoscopies—all are grist for O'Connell's ability to view the world simultaneously anew and as it once appeared. Wistfully admiring his daughter's awareness of how the pandemic has turned snow days into remote teaching days, he observes "thirteen winters, / I'm finding, is enough to become wise." 
 
 From the quotidian to the profound, this is a collection that hovers around your consciousness, reshaping your own vision and insight.
Contents
I. 
 Late at Night, I Watch The Blue Planet 
 We're Thinking of the Black Hole at the Center of the Galaxy 
 Fresh Air 
 I'm Happy Because My Daughter Is Sad 
 Intervale Cemetery 
 Period Piece 
 Frank O'Hara 
 The Physician 
 I'm Calling 911! 
 Hunt 
 You Must Act as Though You'll Live 
 In Spring 
 Let's Talk About the Weather 
 
 II. 
 Watching My Wife Parasail 
 The Yard Is Full of Light 
 I Was Startled It Was Death 
 We Rush to See Their Movies 
 After 
 The Forecast Calls for Snow 
 My Friend Comes Back 
 This Is How It Happens 
 In College We Were Assigned "The Dead" 
 In Case You Were Wondering 
 Watching My Daughter's Tap Recital 
 The Past Isn't What It Was When It Was 
 The Rational Animal 
 You Were My First Fox 
 Cathedral Ledge 
 
 III. 
 Minor Planets of the Inner Solar System 
 Oh My Goodness, Here Goes Your Body 
 Procedure 
 Avalanche 
 As If There Were Lessons 
 How to Tell the One About Fatherhood 
 This Time 
 Emitter 
 I Read the Dead are Returning 
 The World As It Is 
 Encore 
 All Summer, the Rain 
 Love Song 
 Starter Home 
 When I Hear It's a Buyer's Market 
 The Elegant Universe 
 
 Acknowledgments 
 Notes


 
               
               
               
              


