Catalina begins on America's east coast, where the 'dense woods are full of secrets/full of children with their heads ducked against the weather.' The book's first poems (in the 'Coast' section) explore a gradual coming to awareness on that right coast. The book's second section ('To Coast') takes the long journey west to the Pacific, 'through the great rippling heartland, a bridge between Oceans,' with an accompanying focus on the mysteries and conflicts that vie for our attention as we lose the momentum of youth and settle in to our real lives. The third set of poems ('Being Here') celebrates the present moment, the self as a bridge between generations, as a conduit of the life force. The poems of the fourth and final section ('Looking Out') study the view out beyond the continent one has crossed; to what is next, the possibility of flight into other worlds beyond the rituals of everyday. There, out in the 'endless churning ocean' is the next body of land, an island that is 'where to go next, where not to go.' The book's poems calmly open the doors to reveal magic and tragedy and make the case for looking out while staying put. These are poems of the restless American spirit--'We ache for shuttling further, for the oblivion of the new'-- and the peace that comes with the recognition that there is nowhere better to go. This is Ms. Soriano's first full-length collection.