ISBN-13: 9780987857040 / Angielski / Miękka / 2013 / 164 str.
Craig Murray's collection "Watching Her Walk" is a remembrance of love both familial and romantic. It is the joys and sorrows, heart swelling moments and heartbreaking ones that taken together make up the tapestry of life. They are the themes and stories that while incredibly personal, are in their own way universal and known to us all. Some Reviews From Amazon Craig Murray has a knack with the English language that can take the reader down many a moving journey. Sometimes his poems are hauntingly beautiful and at other moments compellingly profound. Yet they all have one common denominator -they make the reader think. Oft times they challenge the readers view of reality and sometimes his poetry expands a common view. Murray's work is a gift and should be treasured as such. These poems have reached inside of me and exposed feelings I almost forgot I have. His rich and colorful language tells a story in a symphony of emotions and fantasy. He is a writer that has a strong voice, and I look forward to reading more of his work. 'Watching Her Walk' by Craig Murray is a collection of this talented mans poetry. It is a daring look in his soul. I find myself rereading every poem and each time I discover something new, a smile or a tear. It is an excellent read. Craig Murray's work is inspired, elegant, beautiful and passionate. If you like poetry, you will love "Watching Her Walk"; it's a gem that everyone needs in their poetry collection. I can't wait for it to come out in hard copy or paperback so I can buy a copy to put on my bookcase shelf reserved for my favorite poets of all time. Well done, Craig Craig Murray is a master at encapsulating the feeling of a moment, the glance at a lover, that initial look of desire, as well as in conveying the intensity of the feelings of falling in and losing love. His images are finely tuned to convey their effect. In this book you will find Murray paying tribute to all that comes with being caught up in that initial feeling of meeting that someone special and, it seems, the inevitable loss that is soon to follow. He examines the hole that comes, the blackness that can result when what was so preciously held slips away. And he peers inward to examine himself and his gender.