This Spring, the OA will focus on food.
Through fresh reporting, in-depth profiles, and daring personal essays, this issue will explore what we eat: people, industries, and tastes that both build and challenge our ideas of Southern food.
Through fresh reporting, in-depth profiles, and daring personal essays, this issue will explore what we eat: people, industries, and tastes that both build and challenge our ideas of Southern food.
“The alligator’s glory days are over.... For a long time it seemed like the party would never end. The ancient gator was king of the swamp, and the entire world was swampland.” — Sam Anderson, “Our Own Monsters”
Essays by Lewis Nordan, Matt Dellinger, and Sam Anderson. John T. Edge investigates the culinary underground. Criticism by Adam Kirsch. Poetry by Laura Newbern and Benjamin Pryor.
Other contributors include Roy Blount Jr., Hal Crowther, Sarah Wilson, and more.
Editor's Box
by Marc Smirnoff
The Front:
Dispatches from around the South.
Sense of Place:
Hot Springs, Arkansas
Photographs by Lucy Capehart
Local Fare:
The Culinary Underground
by John T. Edge
Family:
Burning Love
by Linda Sherbert
Art:
Visions of Finster
by Greg Bottoms
Recollections:
Miss Welty Comes to Town
by Roger Mudd
Law:
Between the Lines
by Emily Bazelon
Criticism:
A Lonely Crusade
by Adam Kirsch
Fine Print
George Patterson, Percival Everett, and John McManus reviewed.
Music Notes
Uncle Tupelo, Cat Power, Kenny Brown, Bonny ‘Prince’ Billy, Stephen Malkmus, and more.
Dealer's Choice:
Twilight of the Dragons?
by Hal Crowther
Gone Off Up North:
Casting Watermelons
by Roy Blount, Jr.
Southern Scenes:
Gueydan, Louisiana
Photograph by Sarah Wilson
Greys in Flight
Dogs in the city usually don’t get into this kind of trouble.
A story by Lewis Nordan
Hardcore Troubadours
The Old Crow Medicine Show wants to rescue country music—if only Nashville will give them the chance.
by Matt Dellinger
Our Own Monsters
In a Louisiana swamp, a phobia two hundred million years in the making comes alive.
by Sam Anderson
Central State, by Laura Newbern
Sheep Slaughter in 75 Syllables, by Benjamin Pryor
Cover: Photograph by Sarah Wilson