Roley s work has been praised by everyone from "New York Times "literary critics to APIA author Helen Zia for his bare, poetic style and raw emotionalism. In the collection s title story, a woman living with her daughter and her daughter s American husband fears the loss of Filipino tradition, especially Catholicism, as she tries to secretly permeate her granddaughter s existence with elements of her ancestry. In "New Relations," an American-born son introduces his mother to his Caucasian bride and her family, only to experience his first marital discord around issues of politesse, the perception of culture, and post-colonial legacies. Roley s delicately nuanced collection often leaves the audience with the awkwardness that comes from things lost in translation or entangled in generational divides."