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Sign up todayThe Meth Lunches
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“Author Kim Foster is a James Beard Award winning food writer whose husband's career took them to Las Vegas, NV. When she and her husband begin to renovate their downtown 1940s bungalow, they hire Charlie, a pseudo-homeless man with carpentry skills - who also happens to be addicted to meth. As Kim and her family bond with Charlie over the lunches she prepares and shares, she comes to know the person and the troubles behind Charlie's addiction. Ultimately Charlie moves on from their life, but Kim meets denizens of the Vegas Strip who struggle with addiction, mental illness, trauma, and incarceration. Because Kim is the ultimate foodie, many of her interactions with those who struggle take place over meals, often lunch, which as a foodie she describes in exquisite detail. The Meth Lunches ultimately illuminates the lives of those at the periphery, those often victimized by government and society, those people who sometimes just need a helping hand that is not coming. And Kim's descriptions of the food she prepares and eats will make you quite hungry..”
— Rachel • Quail Ridge Books
Summary
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.