The book cover for Cyra Sweet Dumitru's memoir told in poems "Elder Moon" featuring an elderly woman smiling in a blue shirt with a woman and a man on either side of her

Elder Moon

Memoir Told in Poems | Finishing Line Press

“A sliver of light through the window of a passing life, Elder Moon traces the aging process, the experience of eldercare, and ultimately, loss, in a delicate and potent dance of words that captures moments unbound by time.  A master of metaphoric portraiture, Cyra Dumitru gifts us unforgettable lines worth more than pictures, lines that capture the spiritual essence and the expressions of the transient, physical shell.”

Dr. Carmen Tafolla, Texas Poet Laureate, 2015

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Poetic excerpt from Elder Moon

Elder Moon

The beauty of her octogenarian skin
curving creamy as a summer moon
along her shoulders and back

bare before the warm washcloth
I hold as I bathe her -- sitting
on the edge of her hospital bed.

The delicate spaces we stumble upon
when frailty comes calling.


Cyra Sweet Dumitru

Praise

“Elder Moon, read in its entirety, is an expression and evocation of unconditional love. This isn’t a super evolved, steady state! There is struggle and heartbreak, but there is so much to be said for a vulnerable, yet attentive, turning towards life. Cyra’s turning towards—touching life as it is, circumstances and people as they are—these come through in lines and silences of each and every poem. Through bearing witness with and offering care to her mother-in-law, her husband, her family, herself—she is learning how to become a loving human being.

These poems are a gift because they allowed me to enter into that learning which makes the abstract words “unconditional love” real and alive.

This testimonial would be incomplete if I didn’t celebrate in Elder Moon the vivid imagination, love for the natural world, the creative use of the space a poem makes as a living thing, and a mature spirituality.  These are Cyra’s treasured companions from the start and each helps to inform this book of healing poems.”

John Fox, President, The Institute for Poetic Medicine