REVIEW: Throne of Blood by Cassandra Troyan

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Buy Throne of Blood on Solar Luxuriance here.

BY: WYATT SPARKS

Wyatt Sparks works at a library where he helps old people post to christianmingle.

Let’s get one thing straight, there’s going to be a lot of blood.

It told us that in the title though.

Throne of Blood’s “Preamble” sits somewhere between the first Texas Chainsaw Massacre, and Beckett. It’s vulgar, mean but existential. “Preamble” focuses on two serial killers, ‘1’ and ‘2’, essentially running a human slaughterhouse. Troyan shows us the details. It’s a particular kind of horror though, Troyan’s not in it for shock value which is a relief; instead she slides through gory descriptions without reveling in them.

“Preamble” introduces the duality found throughout Throne of Blood. During a murder Edith Piaf plays on a record upstairs.

It’s love nuzzled among guts.

Love exists somewhere, we can hear it, but it’s in another room and it’s in French.

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EAR EATER #17: REPRISE, DEVISE

   

This session of EAR EATER is a sweet grappling back into the EE archives, along with a performance/presentation by the Lit Mistress herself, (Cassandra Troyan), as to all the myriad reasons why one should invest in the vitality of the curated word. 

#17 will take place in the beloved hometown of the poetry hostess; Columbus, Ohio at ROY G BIV gallery. 

PLUS! Live words from Ryan J. Eilbeck, Natalie Shapero, and Tatyana Kagasmas.

Located in the Short North Arts District of Columbus OH for 20 years, ROY G BIV is the longest running gallery in the neighborhood. The gallery is located on the corner of Starr and High.

997 North High Street
Columbus Ohio 43201
614.297.7694

http://roygbivgallery.org/

FIVE QUESTIONS WITH FENG SUN CHEN

1) Give us a sentence or two about your work. Or give us as many as you need.

1. I joke sometimes that I have an aesthetics of laziness. It’s not a political laziness but a pathological one, but maybe that’s the same thing. At a reading, someone once congratulated me on having a “great sense of… despair.” But my real answer is that I’m not sure how to talk about my work right now, because it’s in-between states right now, sublimating.

2) What’s the last thing you read that got you truly excited?

2. Debbie Hu’s blog, which I found yesterday.

3) Before this, what were you thinking about? 

3. Whether or not jokes can come true like dreams can come true. For example, I have been encouraged to write, in sort of problematic ways, the shadow sides of asian american classics, or classics in general. What is the opposite of a classic? Me. One of my future projects is Withering Lows, which will be about my romantic experience as an AA. I’m also going to write The Unfortunate Despair Club. 

4) What are your hopes for the evening?

4. I hope to feel human among other humans.

FIVE QUESTIONS WITH CARRIE LORIG

1) Give us a sentence or two about your work. Or give us as many as you need.

1. for me, this question is made of more metal than i would like it to be. or at least, lately i’m having blur feelings about my poems. i know i want to leave behind plenty of layers. i know i want to find skyscraper skin ruptured and tied around my ankles. i want flamingo shards in between my hair oils. i want to fucking love and know someone/people in the good way. by trying to do this, i see the worlds wash up. sometimes in pieces. now, i’m going to force wallace stevens to say something about what my writing might be trying to do. “catches tigers/in red weather.” - disillusionment at 10 o’clock.

2) What’s the last thing you read that got you truly excited?

2. i participate in a reading group with the poets i go to school with called, “gristle day.” we read and discuss books we won’t get assigned in class. bhanu khapli. peter richards. we read this book called, I LOVE DICK, by chris kraus that knocked my chest out of me. people who know me are rolling their eyes right now. i’ve been talking about it. i just. i hadn’t read anything quite this modern/present day that i felt articulated what it was like to be a female artist/intellectual in academia. i’m also a female who has often dated and fallen in love with male artists/intellectuals, which is something else the book deals heavily with. is it stupid that it’s that simple? it forced me to consider, in what i found to be a really productive and critical manner, the gender dynamics of this place where many of us primarily earn a living while trying to be living. how do we love here sincerely and with complexity? how do we work here sincerely and with complexity? also RICHARD BRAUTIGAN’s The Pill versus The Springhill Mine Disaster. i want to sleep whatever gator jerky he’s comes up with those titles on. what a glob of magic mayo that man is! i’m leaning back on my computer chair and clutching my chest right now thinking about those small poems perching.

3) Before this, what were you thinking about?

3. ha. the band actually? i was just watching that documentary about the band’s album the band while drinking a beer i bought on a trip to wisconsin this past weekend. i couldn’t find the new episode of Girls to pirate. man oh man, though, i love watching garth hudson play and yelp. one of them says he asked garth how he got to be the way he is. the guy says garth replied, “well, i played at my uncle’s funeral parlor,” and then the documentary cuts to this fantastic shot of present-day garth muscling and crawling over his keyboards. he’s wearing a white hat that has one of those cheap braided strings across the bill. it’s almost pulled all the way down to the end of his big, white beard, but the way he’s lurching and vomiting on those keys makes it seem like he’s looking you in the eye holes. some kind of silver chain is shaking on his neck. i just like it when people are so in love with what they do, when it’s this huge and lovely tree growth in them. it’s weird and heartening and the kind of beyond you crouch towards.

4) What are your hopes for the evening?

4. this will be the first time i read a group of poems from the manuscript i’m working on together. i’m excited to feel those big blocks come out of my mouth one after the other. i’m excited to destroy a room with a bunch of other female poets. my cattle are standing all together. they are ready to move, and it almost hits you like purring.

5) Why would anyone ever go to a reading?

5. i’m going to sound too general and clench fist again. the act of performing a reading is not a simple one. however, poetry doesn’t live without readings. without voices making actual noise here and there. poetry is always slipping (at least!) one toe off the page, yeah? i think that every poem that has a little blood in it struggles to stand. that’s part of the mist we grasp at when we try to explain out of our split navels why poetry why. poems fight their sound, lift their sounds over them, toy with their sounds, die in their sounds, and without some voice giving them balloon, i think there’s a risk of that power being lost. also, to see and hear a poet grip a room…that’s tearing the moon to rags and watching em wave.

EAR EATER #16: ILLUMINATI RIDERS OF THE FERTILE NIGHT, AKA FUCK CHICK LIT

Please join us for the sixteenth installment of EAR EATER. ILLUMINATI RIDERS OF THE FERTILE NIGHT, AKA FUCK CHICK LIT is an evening proud to present the unfettered and unabashed words of what it means to voice something other than other.  

             Sunday, June 28th, 8 - 11PM

CATHOUSE

5513 S. Cornell Ave. Apt. #2 (just ring the bell!)

Chicago, IL 60637


Rachel Ellison

Feng Sun Chen

Anna Elise Johnson

Natasha Kessler

Carrie Lorig

Megan Milks

Cassandra Troyan

EAR EATER # 15: Paratext Edition

Diego Arispe-Bazan
Megan Milks
Rebecca Elliott

PARATEXT

755 W. 32nd St.

Chicago, IL 60608 


This special edition of EAR EATER is in collaboration with the pop-up bookstore in Bridgeport, Paratext.       
 

     

For the month of May, as part of the annual VERSION FESTIVAL, a Bridgeport storefront has been transformed into Paratext, a center for homeless and wandering books. Drop off your unwanted volumes and buy a few to take home with you. In addition to books, we will feature zines and other publications from local writers. We will host writing workshops, weekly readings, and Story Hours for kids. Paratext will provide a cozy and inviting space for you to spend an afternoon with fine company in sundry literary pursuits.

EAR EATER #14: EXTRAVAGANT SIMPLICITY

To be eloquent in one’s objective, while defying the notion of transparency and concise completion

OR,

GET HIGH IN THIS CANDOR.

“It was very early in the morning, the streets clean and deserted, I was on my way to the railroad station. As I compared the tower clock with my watch I realized it was already much later than I had thought, I had to hurry, the shock of this discovery made me feel uncertain of the way, I was not very well acquainted with the town yet, fortunately there was a policeman nearby, I ran to him and breathlessly asked him the way. He smiled and said: ‘from me you want to learn the way?’ ‘Yes,’ I said, ‘since I cannot find it myself.’ ‘Give it up, give it up,’ said he, and turned away with a great sweep, like someone who wants to be alone with his laughter.”
- F. Kafka
  
Sam Topol

Benjamin Chaffee

Andy Plank

Sean Kilpatrick

XINA XURNER


CATHOUSE, 5513 S. Cornell Ave. Apt. #2

Saturday, April 28th, 8 - 11PM

poetsorg:

hello, i’m ariana.  today’s called DAYS OF SUMER.
out there are books, a play & other things like sometimes a tumblr.

poetsorg:

hello, i’m ariana.  today’s called DAYS OF SUMER.

out there are booksa play & other things like sometimes a tumblr.

EAR EATER #13: AWP EDITION (THE IMPOSSIBLE, THE EXTRAORDINARY)

HELLO DARLINGS!

EAR EATER is hosting a reading for AWP 2012 and damn is it a good one!

          

EAR EATER #13 presents: AWP EDITION (THE IMPOSSIBLE, THE EXTRAORDINARY)

Amelia Gray: (Author of AM/PM (Featherproof Books) and Museum of the Weird (FC2). Her first novel, THREATS, is due March 2012 from Farrar, Straus and Giroux.)

Vanessa Place: (Writer, lawyer, and co-director of Les Figues Press. She is the author of Dies: A Sentence (2006), La Medusa (FC2, 2008), and The Guilt Project: Rape, Morality, and Law (2010).

Kevin Sampsell: (Author of the short story collections Beautiful Blemish and Creamy Bullets. He is the editor of The Insomniac Reader and Portland Noir. His newest book is A Common Pornography: A Memoir. He runs the micropress, Future Tense Books.)  

Adam Robinson: (Adam Robinson lives in Baltimore, where he operates Publishing Genius Press. He is the author of, Adam Robison and Other Poems, (Narrow House Books, (2010).


Saturday, March 3rd at 6 - 9PM

Beef & Brandy

127 S. State Street

Chicago, IL 60603


Afterward, head over to the POP SERIAL reading in Wicker Park from 8PM until the world ends.

EAR EATER #12: External Viscera

Please join us for the twelfth installment of EAR EATER. External Viscera is about exposing the guts of form by using the interiority of language and the textual through performative means of communication on the page, and in real time. 

           

Saturday, January 28th, 8 - 11PM

CATHOUSE

5513 S. Cornell Ave. Apt. #2 (just ring the bell!)

Chicago, IL 60637


Coming to you in the flesh, or via Skype!

Russ Februaryy (Russ Woods)
http:// solarflareshavebeenknowntocauseheartache.com
http://februaryy.tumblr.com
http://redlightbulbs.net

Anthony Romero and Jillian Soto
http://www.jilliansoto.com

Alexis Orgera
http://theblogpoetic.wordpress.com
http://htmlgiant.com/author/alexis

Nabiha Khan