A raw, beautifully-composed collection exploring addiction, trauma, poverty, and the journey toward recovery and spirituality through the vernacular and iconography of the popular roleplaying game Dungeons & Dragons.
Total Party Kill (TPK): tabletop roleplaying slang for the situation of all characters dying in the same in-game encounter.
At turns nightmarish, hilarious, brutally honest, and heart-breaking, TPK maps an unforgettable course into the fantastic dark of back-alley dive-bars, demonic underworlds, various rock bottom floors, and a whole host of monsters, both imagined and frighteningly real.
TPK is a strange and deadly beast combining the imagery of Dungeons & Dragons with a real, life-or-death struggle for sobriety. Entirely unique in perspective and voice, theautobiographical speaker within changes fluidly between the poet, a variety of D&D characters, and combinations of both. The text within comprises a genre-bending quest where nothingespecially continued sobrietyis for certain. Operating less like traditional poetry and more like brief monologues or confessionsbut still concentrating on metaphor, meter, and soundTPK will appeal not only to lovers of the worlds bestselling roleplaying game, nor just to lovers of poetry, but for anyone whose life has been touched by addiction.
Total Party Kill (TPK): tabletop roleplaying slang for the situation of all characters dying in the same in-game encounter.
At turns nightmarish, hilarious, brutally honest, and heart-breaking, TPK maps an unforgettable course into the fantastic dark of back-alley dive-bars, demonic underworlds, various rock bottom floors, and a whole host of monsters, both imagined and frighteningly real.
TPK is a strange and deadly beast combining the imagery of Dungeons & Dragons with a real, life-or-death struggle for sobriety. Entirely unique in perspective and voice, theautobiographical speaker within changes fluidly between the poet, a variety of D&D characters, and combinations of both. The text within comprises a genre-bending quest where nothingespecially continued sobrietyis for certain. Operating less like traditional poetry and more like brief monologues or confessionsbut still concentrating on metaphor, meter, and soundTPK will appeal not only to lovers of the worlds bestselling roleplaying game, nor just to lovers of poetry, but for anyone whose life has been touched by addiction.
Used availability for Craig Francis Power's Total Party Kill