
Murder (a violet)
Poetry by Raymond McDaniel
September 1, 2004 âą 6 x 9 âą 76 pages âą 978-1-56689-165-3
A National Poetry Series Winner, this collection follows an enigmatic assassin seeking refuge from her sordid past.
âMysterious and enticing, Murder (a violet) is a brilliant narrative constructed out of âfragmentsâ that âdescribe by accretion.â The author asks us to âImagine an epic from which a minor character walks away. Epic-adjacent.â There are âinstructions for readingâ and âpossible entrances,â but this serial poem also provides room for the reader to enter and participate in the game played by its textual agentsâthe assassin, the abbess, the janissaries, the vines, the trees. Flashes of action, some of them quite violent and noir, alternate with evocative, lyrical passages reminiscent of Japanese landscape scrolls, and speeches concerning questions of guilt and redemptionâall of this composed, with a light touch and an ear sensitive to the weights and balances of words, into a musical structure that rewards re-reading.â âAnselm Hollo, National Poetry Series judge
About the Author
Raymond McDaniel is the author of Special Powers and Abilities, Saltwater Empire, and Murder (a violet), a National Poetry Series selection.
Reviews
Â
âMurder (a violet)Â is somehow new and archaic at once. Delicately colored and carefully worked, this narrative sequence could be the missing fragment of âChristabelââan embroidered ribbon that threads from the gothic to sometime this morning.â âSusan Stewart
âMore than a brilliant debut, Raymond McDanielâs Murder (a violet) is an eerie, haunting redefinition of peaceâwhat it means to feel peace within the self. Here language and storytelling transform into an intimate meditation on oneâs ability to reenter a human environment rooted in remedy, seasonal change. The assassinâs worst is done; our protagonist is stained, and yet she would return to this earth, this soil, these rocks, this life. Truly, a solemn achievement.â âClaudia Rankine
âAn assassin turned penitent, a submerged story obscured by conflicting lines of possibility, roads dissecting other roads. An intrigue related in grape-light and mud cloak. An account both marital and feral, true and not true, poised between judgement and sanction. Coded in hues. Murder (a violet) is a prismatic poem, composed of polished faces. Raymond McDanielâs language trains every particle of your attention on the surface and what stirs beneath.â âC.D. Wright
âMysterious and enticing, Murder (a violet) is a brilliant narrative constructed out of âfragmentsâ that âdescribe by accretion.â The author asks us to âImagine an epic from which a minor character walks away. Epic-adjacent.â There are âinstructions for readingâ and âpossible entrances,â but this serial poem also provides room for the reader to enter and participate in the game played by its textual agentsâthe assassin, the abbess, the janissaries, the vines, the trees. Flashes of action, some of them quite violent and noir, alternate with evocative, lyrical passages reminiscent of Japanese landscape scrolls, and speeches concerning questions of guilt and redemptionâall of this composed, with a light touch and an ear sensitive to the weights and balances of words, into a musical structure that rewards re-reading.â âAnselm Hollo, National Poetry Series judge
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Poetry by Raymond McDaniel
September 1, 2004 âą 6 x 9 âą 76 pages âą 978-1-56689-165-3
A National Poetry Series Winner, this collection follows an enigmatic assassin seeking refuge from her sordid past.
âMysterious and enticing, Murder (a violet) is a brilliant narrative constructed out of âfragmentsâ that âdescribe by accretion.â The author asks us to âImagine an epic from which a minor character walks away. Epic-adjacent.â There are âinstructions for readingâ and âpossible entrances,â but this serial poem also provides room for the reader to enter and participate in the game played by its textual agentsâthe assassin, the abbess, the janissaries, the vines, the trees. Flashes of action, some of them quite violent and noir, alternate with evocative, lyrical passages reminiscent of Japanese landscape scrolls, and speeches concerning questions of guilt and redemptionâall of this composed, with a light touch and an ear sensitive to the weights and balances of words, into a musical structure that rewards re-reading.â âAnselm Hollo, National Poetry Series judge
About the Author
Raymond McDaniel is the author of Special Powers and Abilities, Saltwater Empire, and Murder (a violet), a National Poetry Series selection.
Reviews
Â
âMurder (a violet)Â is somehow new and archaic at once. Delicately colored and carefully worked, this narrative sequence could be the missing fragment of âChristabelââan embroidered ribbon that threads from the gothic to sometime this morning.â âSusan Stewart
âMore than a brilliant debut, Raymond McDanielâs Murder (a violet) is an eerie, haunting redefinition of peaceâwhat it means to feel peace within the self. Here language and storytelling transform into an intimate meditation on oneâs ability to reenter a human environment rooted in remedy, seasonal change. The assassinâs worst is done; our protagonist is stained, and yet she would return to this earth, this soil, these rocks, this life. Truly, a solemn achievement.â âClaudia Rankine
âAn assassin turned penitent, a submerged story obscured by conflicting lines of possibility, roads dissecting other roads. An intrigue related in grape-light and mud cloak. An account both marital and feral, true and not true, poised between judgement and sanction. Coded in hues. Murder (a violet) is a prismatic poem, composed of polished faces. Raymond McDanielâs language trains every particle of your attention on the surface and what stirs beneath.â âC.D. Wright
âMysterious and enticing, Murder (a violet) is a brilliant narrative constructed out of âfragmentsâ that âdescribe by accretion.â The author asks us to âImagine an epic from which a minor character walks away. Epic-adjacent.â There are âinstructions for readingâ and âpossible entrances,â but this serial poem also provides room for the reader to enter and participate in the game played by its textual agentsâthe assassin, the abbess, the janissaries, the vines, the trees. Flashes of action, some of them quite violent and noir, alternate with evocative, lyrical passages reminiscent of Japanese landscape scrolls, and speeches concerning questions of guilt and redemptionâall of this composed, with a light touch and an ear sensitive to the weights and balances of words, into a musical structure that rewards re-reading.â âAnselm Hollo, National Poetry Series judge











