In Tides That Shape Us, Barry C. Eneh offers a clear-eyed and deeply felt meditation on grief, healing, and the slow work of becoming. These poems do not rush resolution or soften what has been lost. They remainattentive, patientalongside the reader, moving through the shifting terrains of sorrow, memory, and endurance. With a voice both restrained and compassionate, Eneh gives language to what many carry but cannot easily name: the enduring presence of love in absence, the quiet labor of continuing, and the subtle ways a life is reshaped by what it has survived.Rather than offering neat answers, this book reveals grief as a living tide: sometimes fierce, sometimes gentle, always shaping those it touches into someone truer. With poetic clarity and contemplative depth, Eneh traces the hidden movements of sorrowhow it unsettles one's identity, widens one's capacity to feel, and ultimately teaches a new way of belonging to oneself and the world.Both intimate and universal, Tides That Shape Us speaks to anyone navigating loss, burnout, disorientation, or the long work of becoming whole again. It is not a map out of grief but a lantern for the pathreminding readers that even in the most broken seasons, something in us is still listening for the shore.