Before the end of her marriage to alt-country darling Jason Isbell became a reality in December 2023, singer-songwriter and The Highwomen member Amanda Shires imagined its possibility on “Fault Line,” from her 2022 album Take It Like a Man. Despondently etching out a rough patch the modern-day Johnny and June had endured, Shires sang as though underwater. As she envisioned how to answer the inevitable questions she’d get about their split, her voice slumped with exhaustion: “I’ll say what’s true/I don’t know.”
As Shires faces the fact of divorce on Nobody’s Girl, her eighth album and first since Isbell filed nearly two years ago, she remains mostly uninterested in tidy stories about what happened. The album sounds as though she’s still down among the debris of her marriage, rather than circling overhead surveying the damage. Shires picks through the wreckage by hand: there’s the serrated edge of abandonment, the brittle filament of betrayal, and the suffocating fog of loss. What’s left to salvage, it turns out, is herself.
Opener “Invocation” is a saging ritual. Shires’ fiddle is the mouthpiece here, her bow dragging against the strings so they groan. But she’s not alone in that pain—a piano balms the burn and together, they offer it all up for release. Partnering again with producer Lawrence Rothman, they strip away the bluesy folk-rock used to ground her fluttering vibrato on Take It Like a Man. This time, they reach for softer styles to cradle her grief. Musing piano and gooey strings take up more space in the mix, their interplay reminiscent of the spun fragility of cotton candy—the slightest drop of rain and it all dissolves.
So how is Shires doing? “I could show you a real shattering/A bird flown into a glass window collapsing,” she sings on the undulating “A Way It Goes,” the drums lumbering behind her. At the chorus, Shires’ voice rises from the ashes of each verse—delicate plumes that write the space between who she was and who she might become, though the calligraphy evaporates before either story is complete. Time’s passage returns some sense of self. Nodding to Emily Dickinson’s “’Hope’ is the thing with feathers”—Shires’ MFA in poetry peeking from behind the curtain—she lands somewhere burbling with possibility: “Even I couldn’t believe it/When I felt my heart sprouting feathers/And I caught myself dreaming again.”

