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Claudia Serea

Spotlight: I Remember the Smells

May 15, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Claudia Serea

[poetry] I remember the smell of rusty handlebars, of rotten onions, smoke, garlic meatballs, stale fried fish, and clogged toilets. The local train smelled of skin of man and animal, of cheap tobacco and unwashed clothes, the smell of poverty and cold. The peasants carried raffia sacks stuffed with bread, food for chickens, and pigs. […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/ClaudiaSerea.jpg 3377 2537 Claudia Serea https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Claudia Serea2017-05-15 09:01:022019-06-29 15:50:07Spotlight: I Remember the Smells

Writers Read: Happening by Annie Ernaux

May 8, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Michelle Templeton

Near the end of her abortion memoir Annie Ernaux writes, “…these things happened to me so that I might recount them. Maybe the true purpose of my life is for my body, my sensations and my thoughts to become writing, …causing my existence to merge into the lives and heads of other people” (92). Not […]

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Jayne Marek, Water Jelly Infinity, 2016, Medium, Size

Spotlight: Northwest Coast Structures

May 1, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Jayne Marek

These images, taken in 2016 in the Pacific Northwest, demonstrate my interest in using tonalities and arrangements to elicit abstract shapes from natural objects. My art photographs utilize isolation of detail as a tactic to focus attention; I enjoy discovering how realistic contents can be grasped in new ways when guided by the discerning camera lens […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/7_Water_jelly_infinity-e1504115266416.jpg 400 586 Jayne Marek https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Jayne Marek2017-05-01 08:00:422019-06-29 15:51:47Spotlight: Northwest Coast Structures

Writers Read: St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves by Karen Russell

April 24, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Meg Gaertner

On the face of it, St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves is a collection of ten short stories, many of which take place on the same island, many of which contain strong elements of magical realism, and all of which employ precise, evocative language. In “Ava Wrestles the Alligator,” against the backdrop of […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/St-Lucys-683x1024.jpg 1024 683 Meg Gaertner https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Meg Gaertner2017-04-24 07:00:082019-06-29 15:52:43Writers Read: St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves by Karen Russell
Gessy Alvarez

Spotlight: The Last Word

April 17, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Gessy Alvarez

[fiction] I’m wearing my banana-yellow pantsuit and my best ash-blonde, bob-styled wig. He’s an hour late. One of my fake lashes falls on my lap. The glue still sticky on my eyelid. He yells from outside my window. You up there? I press the eyelashes back in place and stumble out of the apartment and […]

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To Those Who Have Failed

Writers Read: Vivas to Those Who Have Failed by Martín Espada

April 10, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Adrian Cepeda

Martín Espada, where have you been all of my life? I believe that the universe sends artists, writers and poets gifts of inspiration when they truly need it. Espada is a Latino poet, like me, born in America, who has the eloquence of Walt Whitman and the passionate pulsating spirit of Charles Bukowski. Espada’s poetry […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/martinespadacover.jpg 499 368 Adrian Cepeda https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Adrian Cepeda2017-04-10 07:00:162019-06-29 15:55:12Writers Read: Vivas to Those Who Have Failed by Martín Espada

Spotlight: Shadow

April 3, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Maayan Avery

late night fireplace hiss; you bury yourself in rumpled quilts; woolen sanctums for solitude. circling your callused chest is a prison and epiphany— mouths and pectorals make a reckless truce to learn the metaphors of symmetry. we slipped one quarter in love and the rest in snow; our crumbling house is beige-mess of carpet string, […]

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Writers Read: Kingdom Animalia by Aracelis Girmay

March 27, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Lauren Kinney

This collection of poetry opens with epigraphs by Charles Darwin, including one that lists similarities in the “framework of bones” between different animals: fins and hands, vertebrae in giraffes and elephants, “and innumerable other such facts, at once explain themselves on the theory of descent” (11). The poems shift their subjects from animals to humans, […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/41H2J3ZHyBL._SX331_BO1204203200_-1.jpg 499 333 Lauren Kinney https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Lauren Kinney2017-03-27 08:51:312019-06-29 15:57:03Writers Read: Kingdom Animalia by Aracelis Girmay
Karen Boissonneault-Gauthier, Black Hole, 2016, Medium, Size

Spotlight: Ordinary Space by Karen Boissonneault-Gauthier

March 20, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Karen Boissonneault-Gauthier

Each piece is made from ordinary items such as balls, light fixtures, outdoor flowers and even a jelly fish. The ordinary does not have to stay as such and this collection is meant to challenge the concept of ordinary and take you to the universe of infinite space, where the impossible is possible.

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Copy-of-4_Boissonneault-Gauthier_Black_Hole-e1504115466570.jpg 534 400 Karen Boissonneault-Gauthier https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Karen Boissonneault-Gauthier2017-03-20 08:12:382019-06-29 15:58:33Spotlight: Ordinary Space by Karen Boissonneault-Gauthier

Writers Read: The Best American Short Stories edited by Junot Diaz

March 13, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Melissa Benton Barker

The 2016 edition of The Best American Short Stories, edited by Junot Diaz, plumbs the multiplicity of writing within the English language – and it may be a beacon for the future of the North American canon. The stories contained within this collection represent the vast experience of writing within an “American” life, as opposed […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/bestamericanshort.jpg 299 260 Melissa Benton Barker https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Melissa Benton Barker2017-03-13 07:00:442019-06-29 15:59:29Writers Read: The Best American Short Stories edited by Junot Diaz
Janet Malotky

Spotlight: Ascension / Whale / Post-Apocalyptic Lotus

March 6, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Janet Malotky

Ascension When at last it tilted worse to land than leave what happened was this: the birds snipped their gravitational strands. They took two or three or five final wing strokes heavenward and on that momentum traveled, up and out. Kingdom, Phylum, Class: Aves the birds folded splendor, resisted iridescence, overrode any hints of song. […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Janet-Malotky.jpg 528 431 Janet Malotky https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Janet Malotky2017-03-06 00:25:512019-06-29 16:01:54Spotlight: Ascension / Whale / Post-Apocalyptic Lotus

Writers Read: Live Girls by Beth Nugent

February 27, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Tim Cummings

Live Girls by Beth Nugent is the story of Catherine, twenty-years-old, who abandons her first year of college at a women’s religious university, moves to the nearby city where she takes up residence at a seedy transient hotel, and accepts a job as a ticket seller in a squalid, decaying porn theatre. Catherine is pretty, curiously […]

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Spotlight: Eso

February 20, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Jimena Burnett

When business was slow, the curandero would take his skills to the stable to heal horses. To the ladies at the barn, he speaks English, recommending an ointment, but there is no saying it in English. So, he says it in in Spanish: Cebo de Coyote con Aceite de Víbora. To the horses, he speaks […]

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Writers Read: The Water Knife by Paolo Bacigalupi

February 13, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Kim Sabin

“Somebody’s got to bleed if anybody’s going to drink” (164). In his climate-fiction (cli-fi) novel, The Water Knife, Paolo Bacigalupi’s cinematic writing begs to find its way to the big screen where his vast landscapes, dramatic dialogue, and poignant message on water consumption can reach the masses. While his story lands big, juicy punches, Baciglupi’s […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/waterknife.jpeg 941 631 Kim Sabin https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Kim Sabin2017-02-13 07:00:402019-06-29 16:05:56Writers Read: The Water Knife by Paolo Bacigalupi
Donna Steiner, Swimming with My Eyes Open, July 2016, acrylic ink on clayboard, 6”x6”

Spotlight: Swimming with My Eyes Open

February 6, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Donna Steiner

In the last year, both my mother and father died. They were gone within 42 days of each other, one to a stroke, one to heart failure. These paintings, part of a much larger collection, were attempts to convey feelings of being submerged, of being unable to put words to experience, being unable to surface […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Steiner_Swimming_with_My_Eyes_Open.jpg 480 640 Donna Steiner https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Donna Steiner2017-02-06 08:26:042019-06-29 16:06:54Spotlight: Swimming with My Eyes Open

Writers Read: Coal Mountain Elementary by Mark Nowak

January 30, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Juliann Allison

Coal Mountain Elementary is a noteworthy example of investigative poetry, which incorporates data and reportage—including statistics, historical documents, news media, interviews, and images—into, most commonly, lyrical and prose poems. Claudia Rankine’s Don’t Let Me Be Lonely: An American Lyric (2004) is a well-known example of the former type as it lets the reader enter the […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/coalmountain.jpg 346 231 Juliann Allison https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Juliann Allison2017-01-30 08:30:242019-08-11 17:31:32Writers Read: Coal Mountain Elementary by Mark Nowak
Savannah Johnston

Spotlight: Shells II by Savannah Johnston

January 23, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Savannah Johnston

[fiction] Our room is around the back of the motel, away from the highway floodlights. Hiram and Baby are sleeping in the backseat by the time we pull up, and Mama carries Baby while Daddy slings Hiram over his shoulder like a sack of flour. Myself I walk. I’m grown enough to see the motel […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/SJohnstonPic_opt.jpg 400 300 Savannah Johnston https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Savannah Johnston2017-01-23 08:59:272019-06-29 16:14:28Spotlight: Shells II by Savannah Johnston

Writers Read: The John McPhee Reader by John McPhee

January 16, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Ari Rosenschein

John McPhee writes beautifully. About anything. From conservation and aviation to art and citrus. His voice renders topic irrelevant. Relentless specificity of language is the main attraction. Think ­pieces can blur the line between journalism and literature. Between the academic and the personal. McPhee is investigative nonfiction’s spirit animal. Even The John McPhee Reader’s ‘70s […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/johnmcpheecover.jpg 499 334 Ari Rosenschein https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Ari Rosenschein2017-01-16 07:00:172019-08-11 18:04:29Writers Read: The John McPhee Reader by John McPhee

Spotlight: Tapetum

January 9, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Hannah Ford

[fiction] I hunt in the morning, because the world makes sense when you watch it beginning. The woods, they wake up like my 5-year-old, Emma. Kind of slowly, fluttering, then suddenly it’s all action everywhere all at once and you can’t keep up. The trees and bushes light up from inside, and then the sun […]

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Writers Read: Play it As it Lays by Joan Didion

January 2, 2017/in Amuse-Bouche, Amuse-Bouche 2017 / Anna Dorn

Play it As it Lays is the perfect novel and Maria is a fascinating mix between Lana Del Rey (the old Hollywood glamor, the detached gloom) and Little Edie Beale (the saltine tins, the psychic instability, the domestic disarray), appealing in large part because she is unapologetically herself. As Amy Schumer highlighted through a now-viral sketch, […]

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https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/playitasitlays.jpg 475 316 Anna Dorn https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Anna Dorn2017-01-02 07:00:482019-08-11 17:43:01Writers Read: Play it As it Lays by Joan Didion
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Friday Lunch Blog

Friday Lunch! A serving of contemporary essays published the second Friday of every month.

Today’s course:

Diagnosis: Persisted or Silent Inheritance

November 7, 2025/in Blog / Paula Williamson
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The Queer Ultimatum Made Me Give My Own Ultimatum

September 26, 2025/in Blog / Lex Garcia
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The Family Eulogist

September 5, 2025/in Blog / Claudia Vaughan
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Midnight Snack

Take a bite out of these late night obsessions.

Tonight’s bites:

The Lilac and The Housefly: A Tale of Tortured Romanticism

October 24, 2025/in Midnight Snack / Nikki Mae Howard
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Dig Into Genre

May 23, 2025/in Midnight Snack / Lauren Howard
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The dreams in which I’m (not) dying

April 25, 2025/in Midnight Snack / paparouna
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School Lunch

An occasional Wednesday series dishing up today’s best youth writers.

Today’s slice:

I’ve Stayed in the Front Yard

May 12, 2021/in School Lunch, School Lunch 2021 / Brendan Nurczyk
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A Communal Announcement

April 28, 2021/in School Lunch, School Lunch 2021 / Isabella Dail
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Seventeen

April 14, 2021/in School Lunch, School Lunch 2021 / Abigail E. Calimaran
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Word From the Editor

The state of the world breaks my heart every day. Broken hearted, I stay online. I can’t log off. Because my career and schooling are all done remotely, I tend to struggle with boundaries regarding screen time, with knowing when to break away.

Like many of you, I have been spilling my guts online to the world because the guts of the world keep spilling. None of it is pretty. But it’s one of the things that, having searched for basically my entire life, I found that tempers the chaos that lives rent free inside my head.

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