Biographies of the Extant Inhabitants of the Chateau Kilgore Trout, Brooklyn

Mollusk

Christine Rath is a writer, painter, and entrepreneur. She lives in Brooklyn with a border collie corgi mix named Zadie and a husband named Kevin. She tries to grow plants with mixed results. She studied fiction at Brooklyn College where she met her fellow Trouts. She likes to paint animals and has a project in the works with movie star and honorary Trout, James Franco. She was the senior editor of Magazine Forte and a reader for Electric Literature. Her fiction can be found in issue #27 of the Brooklyn Review and in issue #1 of Magazine Forte. Otherwise you can hear it if you lean in real close to her.

Crow

Rosie Misdary has worked as a photographer and journalist in Africa and the Middle East. She’s also very good at math. Enjoys reading on unpredictable sea voyages. Believes firmly in the hero’s journey. Can navigate using the night sky. Knows all the constellations.

 

Manatee Idol

David Greenwood takes your hand, slips off the ring, reads the latin inscription, turns into an old English sheepdog, looks, pants, looks, snuffles. Uncaps his Mont Blanc.

 

Capybara

A native of the Appalachian Mountains of Southwest Virginia, Erin Harte now haggles for vegetables in four languages in the souks of Morocco. She was a 2010-2011 recipient of a Fulbright grant to Morocco. In a previous life, she was an editor, and educator in Brooklyn, New York. She began her publishing career in the Book Clubs division of Scholastic, buying and developing nonfiction for young readers. After several years working with facts, she left Scholastic to complete an M.F.A. in fiction at Brooklyn College, where she received the Himan Brown Award and the Ross Feld Prize for her short stories. She served as the Editor in Chief for the 2009 edition of the Brooklyn Review. She’s also edited young adult books and web sites for kids, parents and adults who refuse to grow up. Her work has appeared in Her Circle Ezine, Pomp & Circumstance, Brainworld Magazine, Forte’, and Suspicious Zoology.

 

Bear

Helen Rubinstein lives in Iowa. A Troutless version of her story, titled ‘Two Sisters,’ was published in The Collagist.

 

Artichoke

Wythe Marschall was briefly jailed after the publication of Suspicious Anatomy, an illustrated book of evil neuroscience. He is also the co-founder of the Hollow Earth Society and a member of Observatory, a prominent art-and-science gallery/events space in Brooklyn. His stories and essays have appeared in McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern, Ninth Letter, Salt Hill, The Brooklyn Review, and elsewhere. His conceptual art has frightened children across America. He is excited!? about interrobanging.

 

Turtle & Snail

Stephen Aubrey once saw a toddler drink an espresso outside the Astor Place Starbucks. He is the “theater” one.

 

Sloth

Lauren Belski enjoys riding bicycles, taking long walks, and checking her horoscope online. Thanks to these activities, she remains rather optimistic even when surrounded by doom.

 

Orangutan

Elizabeth Stevens has published in or on Explosion-Proof, ElectricLiterature.com, RollingStone.com, and TheAwl.com. Her book Make Art Make Money was published by Lake Union Publishing in 2013. She teaches fiction writing at the Gotham Writers Workshop. With her writing partner Gordon Ebenezer Gourd, she held a semicolon contest which was won by Herman Melville. She is also a Muppet historian.

 

Hawk

CJ Hauser is a spinner of yarns and writer of fiction. Her fiction has appeared in Tin House, Third Coast, The L Magazine, The Brooklyn Review, The Laurel Review, The Kenyon Review, and Esquire. She is the 2010 recipient of McSweeney’s Amanda Davis Highwire Fiction Award, the winner of the 2012 Jaimy Gordon Prize in Fiction and the A Room of Her Own Foundation’s Orlando Prize for Sudden Fiction, was a finalist in Esquire’s Short Short Fiction Competition, shortlisted for the UK’s Bridport Prize and received a commendation in Ireland’s Sean O’Faolin Prize. Her novel The From-Always came out with William Morrow Paperbacks last year.

 

 

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