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Screaming At the World

Author Interview
Chris D’Errico Author Interview

Realistic Meat Substitute is a collection of poems covering themes ranging from conspiracy and commodification to digital alienation and political hysteria. Did you write these poems with a specific audience in mind, or was it a more personal endeavor? 

I do a lot of screaming at the world in my poems. 

Pointing in laughter, recoiling in horror. Singing with joy, sighing in relief where beauty and goodness can be found. It’s deeply personal, of course, sometimes cathartic. I write with the hope that it might resonate with pessimists and optimists alike—that my fellow human beings on planet earth can relate. But, if a machine intelligence (or something otherwise) gets it, too—great! Welcome aboard. 

How do you begin a poem—image, phrase, rhythm, or idea?

I like to improvise and fiddle with language. Usually no plan, no preconceived ideas to start. I don’t want to know what the puzzle is until I solve it, I guess. Open the box, dump the puzzle pieces on the table and get started. Start with the middle or the border pieces? Let intuition be the guide. Musicality is also important. Paying attention to the beat and rhythm of the line, I’ll experiment and play with juxtapositions—see what might stick. What does it mean? What’s it trying to say? Sometimes I’ll have a scene or a situation in mind, so I’ll start with something descriptive of that image. Meaning, subject, theme—whatever the poem is “about”—that generally comes later, if at all. 

Was it important for you to balance satire and intensity with genuine emotional vulnerability?

I think the better poems balance the head and heart, the emotional with the cerebral. Absurdity and irony, with sincerity. Tender, but with bite. If the satire works, it can activate the mind, make you smirk and think, but it’s also driven by emotion. It can be a way of coping with baffling contradiction, trouble, hurt and pain. But, like a ruthless, criminal gangster/bad guy from a story—there’s got to be some relatable humanity to the character, otherwise there’s no emotional investment offered to pull a reader/viewer into the story. 

What is one thing you hope readers take away from Realistic Meat Substitute?

Well, here’s a few things. I hope they enjoyed the ride. I hope I earned the reader’s attention. Life is crazy. Poetry can be many things. Open up and pay attention. To quote artist/musician Laurie Anderson: “Don’t be afraid of anyone, get a good bullshit detector, and be tender.” 

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“In a world of easy answers and synthetic truths, Realistic Meat Substitute asks what’s
left of the soul when everything else is artifice and imitation.”—Randomly Chosen AI Chatbot, after prompts by the book’s author to construct a blurb
for the back cover of Realistic Meat Substitute*

*AUTHOR’S NOTE: ABSOLUTELY NO POEMS CONTAINED IN THIS BOOK

Realistic Meat Substitute: Poems and Whatever Else

Realistic Meat Substitute is a jagged, feverish collection of poems and hybrid pieces that feel steeped in the fumes of late-stage American life. Across sections like “Uncanny Valley,” “Thoroughly Cooked,” “Frankenstein Complex,” and “Kool-Aid or Hemlock,” author Chris D’Errico writes out of a world saturated by conspiracy, commodification, digital alienation, political hysteria, ecological dread, and a stubborn, battered hunger for something more human.

What stayed with me most was the book’s texture: its collision of the grotesque and the lyrical, the absurd and the mournful. One moment we’re in the carnivalesque overload of “Post-Organic Afterworld” or “The Idiot’s Guide to Coup D’etat,” with their clang of slogans, grift, and synthetic identity, and the next we’re in something unexpectedly tender and elegiac, as in “Rock Formations,” with its dead friend Reggie and its gentle ache of memory, or “Departures,” which softens into grief, time, and farewell.

I admired the momentum of the language. D’Errico has a gift for startling phrasing and hard, memorable turns of image. He can be funny, ugly, and very beautiful in the space of a few lines. “Truth Is a Bust” turns truth into a whole unstable, disreputable character, grubby and theatrical and impossible to domesticate, and that poem captures much of the book’s method at its best: personification pushed until it becomes social diagnosis. Elsewhere, pieces like “NOLA Elegy” and “A Love Supreme” show he can do something looser and more melodic, letting place and music carry emotional weight without losing his edge.

I also loved the recurring fascination with sound, rhythm, performance, and noise, the sense that music is one of the few surviving ways to get back to the body, to breath, to soul. The book’s density occasionally asked a lot of me as a reader. Its mode is often accumulation, barrage, and incantation, which can be exhilarating, though in a few poems I felt the intensity of the language overshadowed some of the deeper emotional or reflective movement.

This is a collection deeply suspicious of false transcendence, macho mythmaking, internet brain-rot, and the various ways people trade complexity for certainty. Again and again, D’Errico returns to the emptiness of slogans and the seduction of ideological theater, whether in “Resist the Fallen World,” “Your Motherboard Doesn’t Love You,” or “The Mirage,” where he cuts through delusion with the plain imperative to go outside, listen to birds, pay attention to rain, traffic, physics, reality. The book is full of contempt for fraudulence, but it isn’t nihilistic. Under all the snarling satire, there’s a real plea for honesty, listening, embodiment, and moral wakefulness. Even the title starts to feel right in that context. So much here is about substitutions: synthetic feeling for feeling, performance for conviction, algorithm for conscience, spectacle for life. And beneath the book’s wild surfaces, I felt a sincere grief over what gets lost when we accept the fake thing as enough.

Realistic Meat Substitute wants to scrape, taunt, lament, and sing, sometimes all at once. That won’t be for everyone, but for readers drawn to politically charged poetry, surreal imagery, beat-inflected verbal riffing, and work that wrestles openly with the psychic junkyard of contemporary life, I think this book has real bite and real feeling. It left me unsettled, impressed, and more moved than I expected. I’d recommend it most to readers who like their poetry feral, intelligent, and unafraid of mess.

Pages: 63 | ISBN : 978-1917272131

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