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Selene Skye, click here
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| Category: |
Poetry |
Publisher: |
publishamerica
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ISBN-10: |
1607032449 |
Type: |
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| Pages: |
145 |
Copyright: |
November 2008 |
ISBN-13: |
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The Raspberry Girl Is VictoriaSelene Skye Deme's third book of eclectic prose, mythological short stories spun through modernday archetypes, and a sprinkling from her unique brand of delicious sense of humor.
The Raspberry Girl is a tale of survival enmeshed in brilliant ,eclectic prose and fleshed out in enriched myths turned inside out.
Selene spins a tale of a fragmented girl grown brilliant and blazing into the skin of a woman like a golden Pandora who's box of inlaid sins are like jewels scattered into the mouth of the world. There is a taste of the sweetest waters, of beauty, of pain, and ultimately a catharsis blazing with power.
Excerpt
excerpt from ARTIFACT
Father made me his orient jade child
a dervish of cellular memories
and Buddhist dreams
dancing in rainstorms with wolves
howling through my bones
and Arabian stallions beating gilded hooves
into the cherry wood of their stalls
enchanted into the perfumed skin
I wore so fine
with gems for eyes . . . .
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Professional Reviews
First-class autobiographical poetry
First-class autobiographical poetry
by Chris Brockman
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
December 12, 2008: Selene Skye?s Raspberry Girl is very personal; in fact, it?s autobiographical; even more than that, one could say that Raspberry Girl is Selene (who generally goes by her first name only).
Prose interludes throughout the book explain and underscore the meaning of the poems. By the end, Raspberry Girl has become at least as equally a work of autobiography as a work of poetry. This does not, however, mean that nothing is left to be discovered, uncovered, or recovered, or left to the imagination. Raspberry Girl is rich with symbolism. Meanings don?t much leap off the page (although impressions most definitely do), and despite the prose explanations that help with the broader picture, many shadowy dots are left to connect.
The picture that does emerge is one that is the stuff of literature: conflict, and in his case, a heroic individual struggling for self-identity against stultifying and cruel oppression. It is the nature of the oppression that makes Selene?s story fascinating to contemporary readers. It begins in an almost medieval setting in a ?manor? in Hungary, where she is kept, as a beautiful child, and objectified as a sort of trophy child (shades of Hollywood). She is mentally and physically abused. There are also strong suggestions of sexual abuse. As precocious as she is pretty, the young Selene uses words and poetry (the source of some of the beatings) to discover and preserve her personhood.
Her story turns seamlessly, in the United States, to one of failed and abusive marriages, repression of her nature, and ultimately self-oppression. This juxtaposition of the Gothic with the contemporary makes the whole story relevant, and holds especial interest for women. In fact, there is both a strong feminist tone, here, and a defiance of any male prerogative. At the same time, however, there is intermittently an embracing of sexuality and love?a sort of you can?t live with them, and you can?t live without them. It is clear, however, that Selene will live on her own terms, come what may
The question then arises, is the verse in Raspberry Girl good poetry? The simple answer, based on its efficacy in focusing and communicating the poet?s aesthetic intent and content, is ?Yes.? The tone of the volume?s verse conveys strong immediate impressions. The individual poems also yield a treasure trove of meaning through closer examination. Further, the individual poems play off of and complete one another, making this a volume that can be read over and over with new reward.
The nature of the poetry in Raspberry Girl and the nature of the poet are reflexive. The more one comes to know each reflects upon the other and amplifies how one feels about each. The informational kiosks spaced throughout the volume help readers know at whom they are looking. Ultimately, readers? reactions will depend on whether they like the person they see.
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Reader
Reviews for "The Raspberry Girl"
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| Reviewed by Paul Judges |
2/11/2009 |
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| Raspberry Girl looks really good....well done ! |
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