The title Signals to the Disappearing Shore embodies an ambiguity central to the poems' care for the world we inhabit. Does the shore appear to disappear because viewed from a departing vessel viewed perhaps by desperate emigrants or deportees; or is it literally disappearing, submerged or eroded by changes wrought by time and humankind? Are the signals waves of farewell, or urgent warnings? From the start, the theme of migration is set in a deep historical context, a pattern extended widely in the long poem 'A raga for Enheduana', which ranges in time and geography from the ancient Sumerian poet-priestess who is the earliest individually known writer to the contemporary crimes of some contemporary political leaders.
Environmental threat is given sharpest expression in the central section of the book, eight poems drawing on the author's long-held concern over nuclear proliferation, both weapons and power, the human costs and land destruction. The book also includes the 12-part 'Journal of a plague year' written, as the title suggests, at the height of the Covid pandemic and the social restrictions that came with it, again drawing links between landscapes and events ancient, medieval and modern.