"It is another odd and difficult book, but I think a ground-breaker. It's in an edition of twelve because the labour was colossal ... Quotations are from the King James Old Testament. My own poetry is accompanied by some words of the Ojibway North American tongue. The first half of the book is a visual meditation on water [awabo] as a river; the second, a meditation on that river polluted and cursed by fire [skute]. The structure is of a twice-repeated cycle of changing paper stock, textures, and imagery, with the Ojibway 'wasa wasa' [far away or long and difficult journey] spread throughout the book as one page for each letter. I have drastically condensed a short story (from the book 'Wasa Wasa' by Macfie and Westerlund) which recounts a search in the Yukon for red gold by two white companions, during which a river is enflamed to destroy them. This tale is twinned with that of Moses and Aaron turning the Nile into blood. Both were inspiration for the gold thread of greed running through the book ... I got a big piece of six-point rule and put it on the bed of the press and applied pressure to it so it took up these two beautiful curves. I thought, terrific, and I'll have it running down the book like this all the way through, that's the thread. There was the gold thread because of the red gold, and the silver thread. There was the gold thread because of the red gold, and silver thread because of the water and the moon, who is Artemis, the source of all bitter waters."--Ken Campbell, from The word returned.