Jeffrey McDaniel is the author of five books of poetry, most recently Chapel of Inadvertent Joy. Other books include The Endarkenment, The Splinter Factory, The Forgiveness Parade, and Alibi School. His poems have appeared in numerous journals and antholo
A collection of such emotionally rich, surreal-yet-real poems . .
.My initial reading . . . was thirty minutes spent gorging on the
excess of dark, beautiful words. But, over the next few weeks, I
went back through the book more slowly, mining each poem for
flashes of technique, motifs, and the tiny, bold truths that
McDaniel drops among these pages like glittering jewels.-- "Coal
Hill Review"
Captivates readers with its unfailing abstract thoughts and
striking language. It's a solemn yet delightful poetry collection
that flows from start to finish and challenges readers with its
unique considerations. . . . a must-read.-- "Daily Nebraskan"
McDaniel at this best, and two traits stand out at once: the poet's
masculine big-heartedness, and his genius for carving startling
metaphors and similes out of an unassuming, contemporary American
idiom. . . . Though his poems may often have a formal look about
them on the page, his Whitmanesque warmth and exuberant imagery
engulf neat stanzas like a wave spreading its might over a staid
seaside promenade; the effect is entirely magical.-- "Antioch
Review"
Reading Jeffrey McDaniel's gorgeously dark and utterly compelling
Chapel of Inadvertent Joy reminds me that he is probably the most
important poet in America. The book in your hands was written by a
master of metaphor and a poet of huge imagination and fierce
ingenuity, a fine antidote to realism. Get this voice in your
head.-- "Major Jackson"
What strikes me most about Jeffrey McDaniel's surrealist
atmospherics in Chapel of Inadvertent Joy is his ability to bring
us together, often 'half-naked, with the rest of America, / wearing
only a credit card and cashmere scarf.' Better than the vast
majority of poets writing today, he can make a metaphor out of
anything--the Olympic diver in the eyebrows of Kate Winslet, the
fire licking the hips of the Pacific shore, and the dresses worn by
teenage girls made from the skins of apples. With Dante and
Tsvetaeva under his arm, he chronicles the emotions that jolt us as
we stare into the abyss and pulls us away when we've seen enough.
Funny and melancholic, Chapel of Inadvertent Joy is a deeply moving
book.-- "Khaled Mattawa"
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