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The Meth Lunches

Food and Longing in an American City

Kim Foster

$54.99

Hardback

Forthcoming
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English
St Martin's Press
10 September 2024
James Beard Award-winning author Kim Foster reveals a new portrait of hunger and humanity in America.

Food is a conduit for connection; we envision smiling families gathered around a table-eating, happy, content. But what happens when poverty, mental illness, homelessness, and addiction claim a seat at that table? In The Meth Lunches, Kim Foster peers behind the polished visions of perfectly curated dinners and charming families to reveal the complex reality when poverty and food intersect.

Whether it's heirloom vegetables or a block of neon-yellow government cheese, food is both a basic necessity and a nuanced litmus test: what and how we eat reflects our communities, our cultures, and our place in the world. The Meth Lunches gives a glimpse into the lives of people living in Foster's Las Vegas community-the grocery store cashier who feels safer surrounded by food after surviving a childhood of hunger; the inmate baking a birthday cake with coffee creamer and Sprite; the unhoused woman growing scallions in the slice of sunlight on her passenger seat. This is what food looks like in the lives of real people.

The Meth Lunches reveals stories of dysfunction intertwined with hope, of the insurmountable obstacles and fierce determination all playing out on the plates of ordinary Americans. It's a bold invitation to pull up a chair and reconsider our responsibilities to the most vulnerable among us. Welcome to the table.
By:  
Imprint:   St Martin's Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 243mm,  Width: 166mm,  Spine: 21mm
Weight:   300g
ISBN:   9781250278777
ISBN 10:   1250278775
Pages:   320
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming

Kim is a James Beard award-winning food essayist, cook, wife, mom, foster-adoptive mom, adoptee, and mountain-biking widow. She writes about food as it intersects with addiction, foster care, adoption, poverty and mental illness. Her work has been featured in publications like Bon Appetite, Food 52, NPR's Desert Companion Magazine, and multiple Best Food Writing yearly anthologies. She lives in Las Vegas with her husband, David, a Grammy-winning, and two-time Tony-nominated circus and live entertainment producer, their four kids and a menagerie of animals.

Reviews for The Meth Lunches: Food and Longing in an American City

Kim Foster has written a deeply moving account of people and their food. Not the usual suspects, but people who have been traditionally left out of the conversation...These stories are the invisible ones, and Foster tells them with empathy, boldness and connection. A must read for anyone interested in food, cooking and how people really eat in our communities. --Andrew Zimmern, chef, and host of Wild Game Kitchen This book is a wake-up call for anyone who thinks of poverty merely in terms of welfare or the homeless.... If you're feeling frozen by the magnitude of the problem of poverty, Foster's clearsighted vision will help you tap your inner resources. As she says, ' We can do better.' --Catherine Gildiner, NYT bestselling author of Good Morning, Monster How can we know the people at our table and ourselves if we don't go to the dark places and look around? Kim Foster asks in The Meth Lunches. Through her, we get to know some of the many people she has welcomed to her table as she goes to those dark places and really looks around; more important, in getting to know each of these characters, we get to know the very systems that contain, govern, impede and destroy them...This isn't food writing as comfort; this is food writing as an urgent, riveting, beautifully composed, and necessarily eye-opening. --Charlotte Druckman, editor and creator of Women on Food and founder of Food52's Tournament of Cookbooks Kim Foster drives her culinary food truck to the intersection of poverty and criminal justice and introduces readers to the world around them that many never see. With a seat at her kitchen table, she opens our eyes to the injustice in the world in which our government sometimes works overtime to make life harder for those who need a hug, or a helping hand, or one lovingly made hot meal, to pull themselves out of darkness. -- Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Tony Messenger, author of Profit and Punishment


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