Volume 27, Issue 1
editorial staff
readers
POETRY H.L. Hix • Bunny Goodjohn • Brent Goodman • Edison Jennings • Mary-Catherine Jones • Philip Matthews • Alex Lemon • Adam Tavel FICTION Chris Gavaler • Jenny L. Rife • Dennis Vannatta • Alexander Weinstein NONFICTION Scott Eubanks • Ray Gonzalez • Diane Kraynak • Dan Lago • Kerry L. Malawista • Sarah A. Odishoo INTERVIEWS Diane Kraynak BOOK REVIEWS Tyler N. Moore • Quincy Rhoads • Shannon K. Winston ART Christine Gray
Kerry L. Malawista
When my nephew, Dan Barber, a well-known chef, was asked the question, “Does food taste better when it’s made with love?” he replied with a laugh, “Food with love! I’m a very angry cook in my kitchen! I yell a lot . . . I hope not, because I’m really in trouble.” The interviewer wisely replied, “Maybe we can call it passion.” Passion sounded right to me. Suddenly I was reminded of eating puttanesca.
It was during those first days after my daughter’s death, when I vacillated between numbness and overwhelming grief. I remember little from that time, other than being surrounded by family and friends. One by one they arrived in a steady stream, shedding tears, bearing hugs and platters of food. Each bringing me sustenance, yet I had utterly no appetite. To appease my family I dutifully tasted each new dish, never swallowing more then just a few bites. It was as if I could neither chew the food in my dry mouth, nor allow it past the lump in my throat that would not go away.
Then my friend Tom arrived with two enormous pots, one with polenta, the other brimming with chicken in a puttanesca sauce that he made using skinless thighs, crushed tomatoes and garlic, Kalamata olives, capers and what tasted like an extra quantity of anchovies. There was an eye-opening hint of a flavor I couldn’t identify. Was it basil or thyme? Yet, here was the first aroma that sparked hunger in me. I took a bite. I swallowed. Suddenly, I wanted more. In that moment, my numbness was replaced by a craving that originated from somewhere deep inside of me. Did somehow this complexity of flavors capture something about my daughter, both powerful and exotic? Was this dish suffused with her or was it just that it lifted me away to a faraway place?
READ MORE>Christine Gray was born in Fairfield, CA in 1980. She lives in San Jose, California.
http://www.christinegray.com/news & events
contests
Zone 3 Press sponsors two book competitions: The Zone 3 Press First Book Award in Poetry and The Zone 3 Press Creative Nonfiction Book Award. Winners receive $1,000 and publication of their book, as well as an invitation to give a joint reading at Austin Peay State University with the contest judge.
Zone 3 Press publications are made available from the Zone 3 Store and your favorite booksellers.
POETRY H.L. Hix • Bunny Goodjohn • Brent Goodman • Edison Jennings • Mary-Catherine Jones • Philip Matthews • Alex Lemon • Adam Tavel FICTION Chris Gavaler • Jenny L. Rife • Dennis Vannatta • Alexander Weinstein NONFICTION Scott Eubanks • Ray Gonzalez • Diane Kraynak • Dan Lago • Kerry L. Malawista • Sarah A. Odishoo INTERVIEWS Diane Kraynak BOOK REVIEWS Tyler N. Moore • Quincy Rhoads • Shannon K. Winston ART Christine Gray
Kerry L. Malawista
“When my nephew, Dan Barber, a well-known chef, was asked the question, ‘Does food taste better when it’s made with love?’ he replied with a laugh, ‘Food with love! I’m a very angry cook in my kitchen! I yell a lot . . . I hope not, because I’m really in trouble.’”
READ MORE>Christine Gray was born in Fairfield, CA in 1980. She lives in San Jose, California.
http://www.christinegray.com/