Raymond's Run

What is the author's style in Raymond's Run by Toni Cade Bambara?

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The most prominent stylistic aspect of "Raymond's Run" is the narrator's voice. Hazel Parker, narrating in the first person ("I"), recounts her experiences on the city streets and at the May Day races with verve and flair. The immediacy of an oral voice is communicated by the use of colloquial expressions (the everyday language of a community), as in Hazel's declaration "I don't feature a whole lot of chit-chat, I much prefer to just knock you down from the jump and save everybody a lotta precious time."

Repetitive, rhythmic phrasing is another technique which contributes to the oral quality of the narration, such as when Hazel describes her mother's reaction to Hazel's "high-pranc[ing]" down 34th Street "like a rodeo pony" to strengthen her knees: "she walks ahead like she's not with me, don't know me, is all by herself on a shopping trip, and I am somebody else's crazy child." Hazel also makes asides to the reader ("Oh brother") and commands a range of tones from confident to defiant to lyric, as in her dream-like visions before the race: "I dream I'm flying over a sandy beach in the early morning sun, kissing the leaves of the trees as I fly by." Through these techniques, the narration of "Raymond's Run" engages the reader and reflects the exuberant vitality of a young girl and her particular community.

Source(s)

Raymond's Run, BookRags