In DRIVING AROUND, LOOKING IN OTHER PEOPLE'S WINDOWS, Bledsoe tackles the agonies and bittersweet triumphs of modern life with resolute and unflinching commitment. Moments of humor bite through prolonged meditations on the past. Hypothetical explorations, controlled thought-spirals, and vignettes from life are held generously open-ended, which speaks to a universal kind of shared grief, a universal unknowing, and longing.