BEAST FEAST


#iwtv#interview with the vampire#the vampire armand#assad zaman


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BEAST FEAST
+ Torquatus
Torquatus is colossal. He has one of the largest masses of any known demon, and can pull it to himself and grow large enough to demolish an entire city if he so wishes. Luckily the strain of manifesting on the mortal plane means he doesn't swell up unless he really needs to. On average, he stands at maybe twenty feet at the shoulder, although has been known to shrink to ten or eight feet for convenience.
+ Torquatus
Torquatus is an extremely powerful alpha demon - he killed Alberus Daugherty, Amador's closest friend, and tormented the former professor for years on end before attacking him and savagely tearing him open. Amador narrowly escaped with his life by forcing Torquatus back through a Hell portal, and then alchemized his shattered bones into alloy. Torquatus still restlessly hunts the geckoman through the mortal plane, and both have sworn to rest only when the other is dead.
"one life flows into another through long study and acts of love"—poet Rosanna Warren in our pages and in for a reading
Rosanna Warren will read tonight at the Institute. She contributed the deeply musical (in every sense), elegiac and masterful poem "Water Damage" to Salmagundi #158-159 and this fine account of Robert Lowell's Day by Day to a special feature on the writer she calls 'the inescapable elder poet."
On Robert Lowell
BY ROSANNA WARREN
Robert Lowell is, for me, the inescapable elder poet, and Day by Day is the inescapable book. It is where you go if you want to see where American poetry last set into major balance an art fully aware of its traditions and an experimental openness to unliterary raw material. Leaving behind the ruck and rubble of Notebook and History, it steps beyond the Cyclopean masonry blocks of the un- rhymed sonnets of The Dolphin and ventures into irregular but adamantine shapes of feeling and thought. The smashed sonnets may suggest the smashed life or lives the book loosely recounts: aging friends, dead friends, dead parents, are summoned; a marriage is chronicled in its dilapidations; mental breakdown sends the suffering speaker once again to a hospital. From these wreckages and from the wreck of stricter verse form, Lowell has saved the aphoristic essentials, and broken through to poetic renewal in the very recognition of failure. Sacrifice, truly executed, earns recompense, and these poems do.