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Violet
Selima Hill

Violet

Aug 01, 1997
9781852244002
| Paperback
80 pages
Dewey 821.914
LC Classification PR6058.I4494 .V56 1997
LC Control No. 97188478

Plot

Shortlisted for the Forward Prize, the T.S. Eliot Prize and the Whitbread Poetry AwardViolet is now included in Selima Hill's Selected Poems (Bloodaxe Books, 2008) which covers all Selima Hill's books from Saying Hello at the Station (1984) to Red Roses (2006).Violet is full of double startlingly wild, often bizarre poems on sisters and husbands, sex, ducks and fridges. If Selima Hill seems to show as strange a portrait of family life as anything by Buuel or Almodovar, that is because her mirror reects more than just surfaces. Hers is a looking-glass world seen through a fairground mirror, which exaggerates and accuses as well as telling a few home truths. Both distorting and revealing, Violet explodes lies and tells them too; exposes myths and creates them. In the end, nothing is certain, except that there are giant cows paddling in the stream, sloths singing in the trees, ants herding ferocious sheep, and ailing sh in the sh hospital. When the mirror cracks, with pain or laughter, the book splits into two halves. 'My Sister's Sister' is the story of two sisters, from the early days of their childhood to their nal estrangement after the death of their mother. 'My Husband's Wife' is a woman whose love for her husband survives the painful breakdown of their marriage.Violet was a Poetry Book Society Choice and was shortlisted for all three of the UKs major poetry prizes, the Forward Prize, T.S. Eliot Prize and Whitbread Poetry Award.