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Biographical note: Sascha Aurora Akhtar was born in Pakistan. Since that was obviously a mistake, she fled as soon as possible to an environment where women could be wacky. What was born was a hydra. Each head a different medium, via which to transmit her wyrd and whimsical witchery. She graduated from Bennington College in 1999. She has written all too many poems, out of which some have managed to become titled collections. Her films include Ana-el-Haqq (2002) and The Sea and Medusa (2006). In 2003 she received a fellowship from the Creative Writing department at UMASS Amherst where she worked with James Tate, Sabina Murray and Peter Gizzi. In 2005 and 2006, she performed in Butoh-based dance pieces at Chisenhale Dance Space in London. She recently was part of a year-long initiative by the International Museum of Women in San Francisco, exhibiting work by women artists from around the globe. Her photographic work was on display at Gallery 27 on Cork Street in September 2007 and an exhibition of her works is upcoming in Spring 2008 at The Commune in Karachi, Pakistan. She spends her time in London and Pakistan and is the co-producer of the successful La Langoustine Est Morte reading series.
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EAN13: 9781844713097 ISBN: 9781844713097 Author: Sascha Aurora Akhtar Title: The Grimoire of Grimalkin Series: Salt Modern Poets Product class: BB Language: eng Audience: General/trade BIC subject category: CTCH1 Publisher: Salt Publishing Pub date: 11-Nov-07 Extent: 80pp Height: 216 mm Width: 140 mm Thickness: 11 mm Weight: 120 gms Supplier: Gardners Books Supplier: Ingram Book Group Supplier: Inbooks (James Bennett) Availability: IP Price: GBP 12.99 Price: USD 23.95 Rights: World
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description/annotation: The Grimoire of Grimalkin is for lovers, lovers of words, and lovers of language itself. Musicality, high drama, references to mythology, literature, film and TV are all overshadowed by a dark brooding female sensibility. Any notions of “meaning” are consistently challenged in Akhtar’s primordial forge, where language melts into a bubbling cauldron of delicious trickery, sex and death, magick and mayhem and, above all, love. This is a work of contemporary Gothic, with a punk core and an anarchic sense of humour.
Main description: The Grimoire of Grimalkin was conceived during passionate affairs with French fin-de-siècle literature and Russian poets from the 1920s of the obscure kind. At the same time, the poet was conducting amorous relations with Old English fairy tales, and the English language itself, its past, present and future. Roots were plundered, whilst flirting with Plato’s notions of the thing itself versus the image conjured up by the word. There is a strong strain of the Eastern courtly love tradition, too — the wretched, tortured lover, but it is never quite clear who the object of love is. Wrapped in necromancy, invocations and references to the Devil, The Grimoire of Grimalkin is a baroque excursion into language taking Bakhtin’s ideas of polyglossia, Deleuze and Guattari’s rhizome model and other postmodern philosophies and running amok with them. The work is rife with literary, film, and television references, and a particular debt is owed to The Hitchiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. There is a feeling of an articulate medieval sensibility at work here. Fraught with nightmares, superstitions and mythology. In the 16th century “grimoires” were spell books written by occultists. In Akhtar’s Grimoire there is a channelling of sorts, of talking in tongues, of black magic, through the use of language of all guises. Obsolete or “dead” words mingle with contemporary British slang, “Indo-European roots” appear harmonizing with malapropisms and puns. The Devil makes several appearances in reponse to wild invocation, perhaps to enamour lovers. Any notions of “meaning” are consistently challenged in Akhtar’s primordial forge, where language melts into a bubbling cauldron of delicious trickery, sex and death, magick and mayhem and, above all, love. This is a work of contemporary Gothic, with a punk core and an anarchic sense of humour.
Table of contents: MOVEMENT I Immerito Meo Urban Sojourn Enueg Marasmus Liverish Cathexis 1:1 Cathexis 2:1 Cathexis 2:2 Tribunal Sirvente Mot Subfusc Soeur Frere CAESURA Amidst What A Ruckus Physix Foul Play Sable Poem MOVEMENT II La Peinture Eastern European Egress Abacus Stew & Yorkshire Pudding Beignet 60 By 120 Km Ellipse Valhalla View excerpt as PDF: Click here to view a sample (78 KB)
Excerpt from book:
La Peinture
Tristan carnival a bulwark upon blaze me a laugh a jus meo gravio where is her head where black strands each woven pupa around no face Tristan your walnuts well so fit sweeny my palm feel near surface ribs so feel with finger pronounce each one madhocks hurly-burly at ad hoc junction.
Desiree deliquesce into politesse armagnac sous vela vela Titian a young man as eyebrow brown stare in to me is more is makes sound pop sternum makes sound no dura mater heard is champagné on bottom of barouche scraping slug maze trail we you follow to no place nausea.
Unpublished endorsement : Besides an inveterate love of language which makes you write "her malachite décolletage," whatever else you need to be a good poet is here. It could be sounds. Come right in; don't step gently then. Bernadette Mayer Unpublished endorsement : Sascha Akhtar repels ghosts with this text and liberates the word from the burden of meaning. These poems are spells and sonorous soundings that have the power to frighten, seduce or enchant. Akhtar aspires to magic. This is a timeless and vital collection from a poet willing to transcend the liminal. Anthony Joseph Review quote: Sasha Akhtar’s Grimoire of Grimalkin, a contemporary masterpiece, is appropriately titled, for it is indeed a textbook of magic and there is certainly something feline but devilish about the voice we hear. This modern-day Liber de occulta philosophia reads like a wassail of honey meade distilled through concepts, as is when we read that “Egalité sounds like a burp” (p. 9). The magic this grimoire offers to der Zauberlehrling is that of words themselves, spells for spelling the world anew, for divining the words that lie beneath the surface, for summoning communication where it is not: “She loves him / this dead man / girlfriend tells / stories in French / subtitled in Vietnamese” (p.13). This work by a master smith is written in language—not in a language, but in language. The scurrying of energies that carry the reader along communicate to the reader in their very inter-communication with each other. The spell lasts from beginning to end. Read it. Phillip John Usher, Lecturer in French and Comparative Literature at Barnard College (Columbia University). Review quote: Dans son Grimoire, Sasha Akhtar nous montre des intestins et de l’intelligence : elle n’ignore pas que, pour que la philosophie occulte soit digne de ce nom, il ne faut pas trop dire. Ce livre, voulu par la matière dont il se nourrit, est un mugissement sans nom. Le lecteur aura peur parfois d’être dupe, il aura peur parfois d’être devenu sorcier à son tour, il aura peur parfois d’avoir refait le monde à son image, puis s’arrachera les yeux. La poésie contemporaine attendait ce livre. Christian Zorka, auteur de Sièges (Montréal: Le Quartanier, 2006). www.christianzorka.com |
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