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‘I think there should be a National Service of Hospitality. The best way to see the true face of humanity is to serve it a plate of chips.’
Camilla Grudova on bad-mannered customers.
‘Anyone who has ever worked night shifts will understand the vertiginous feeling that comes with staring down the day from the wrong end.’
A.K. Blakemore on working nights.
‘I was constantly reading job ads, trying to find my holy grail – a job I could stand to do, and someone foolish enough to hire me.’
Sandra Newman on learning how to play professional blackjack.
‘I loved being a receptionist. What I loved about it was playing the part of being a receptionist.’
Emily Berry on being a temporary office worker.
‘Every part of you would swell, including your eyeballs, and no matter how much water you drank, you were always dehydrated.’
Junot Díaz on working for a steel mill.
Y-Dang Troeung was a researcher, writer and assistant professor of English at the University of British Columbia. She was the author of Refugee Lifeworlds: The Afterlife of the Cold War in Cambodia, and she co-directed the short film Easter Epic and organised the exhibition Remembering Cambodian Border Camps, 40 Years Later at Phnom Penh’s Bophana Center. She died of pancreatic cancer at the age of forty-two. ‘Mute Tree’ is an excerpt from her memoir Landbridge, forthcoming from Allen Lane in the UK and Knopf in Canada.
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‘the woods are vocal / with no single refrain’
Poetry by Jonathan Skinner.
‘I came to the magazine in 2005 and took over the editorship in 2013.’
Sigrid Rausing introduces her last issue.
‘I repeat: the landscape of war is an acoustic landscape.’
Peter Englund on the war in Ukraine, translated from the Swedish by Sigrid Rausing.
‘It’s a paper bag filled with pastries. Chicken turnovers.’
An extract from Family Meal by Bryan Washington.
‘I see this everywhere. The creativity, resourcefulness and incredible talent for improvisation in Egypt.’
Wiam El-Tamami on returning to Cairo.
‘The Christian world does have a very bad conscience about the Jews, both because of past centuries and because it did indeed remain indifferent during the Nazi extermination...’
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