Synopses & Reviews
Food for the Soul is a fascinating collection of writings by homeless participants of New York City's famed Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen Writers Workshop, founded by Ian Frazier, who wrote the introduction. It iscompiled by The Rev. Elizabeth Maxwell, priest at Holy Apostles and Susan Shapiro, who teaches the workshops. Suggested Workshop topics include: How I Came to New York, My Best Mistake, A Wild Ride, You Can Get Used to Anything, and Ten Rules for Living.
Synopsis
This collection of essays, poems and stories from 25 talented participants in a soup kitchen writers' workshop lives up to its title. The selections are funny, gritty and brutally honest, writing that attests to a raw spirituality formed and informed by life on the street. When these writers are given prompts like It Was the Best Day, So I Lied, September Eleven, My Best Mistake or In My Other Life, they hold nothing back. Peter Nkruma writes about the delicious fun he had at the library writing on his Web log a parody of the evangelical Left Behind series of apocalyptic fiction, playing God and rapturing to the heavens a boozy magazine editor he liked while leaving behind one who ignored articles by African-Americans. Donald Mackey's moving essay on Working for My Welfare describes scrounging for a dirty pair of gloves at a cleaning job he needed to keep his food stamps. In his piece on Recovering, Mackey reflects on how the writers' workshop has changed his life, he is now a licensed minister completing a book and a one-act play. Sometimes sweet and sometimes bitter, this collection is a nutritious slice of life from a writers' workshop that's truly in the soul-food business. Publisher's Weekly