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lime tea, november 2006: no sleep till brooklyn

Love it or lob dirty bombs at it, everybody has an opinion about our nation's first city. And I'm not talking about that puffed-up weak sister Washington, D.C., either: everyone knows America's real capital is Stuyvesant's $24 folly, New York City. Lime Tea will spend November hating it and wishing we lived there.


Thursday, Nov. 9:

Who Are You And Why Are You Like This: The RNC Diaries , by Marty Smith {journal}

Outside of John Popper, there are few people less likely to turn up at the Republican National Convention than Marty Smith. (Inside of John Popper, of course, you can meet all kinds of folks.) Nonetheless, LT's editor found himself at the RNC in 2004. Sadly, he would lose himself again a scant few minutes later.

Apology Log, by Kio Stark {journal}

Yes, this is a rerun, but we'll bet you don't remember it. Even if you do, read it again; it's been a while. It's about all the ways you can apologize to people in New York City. And this is only one day-- no wonder everyone there is so on edge.


After a year-long hiatus, Lime Tea is back with our take on the three things that make our modern world go round. You may not like them, but when the chips are down, which would you rather have - the love and understanding of a good friend? Or a good attorney, a loaded Glock, and $30M in negotiable securities?


Tuesday, Oct. 31:

Born on the Fourth of July, by Jim Cooley {anecdote}

According to author James R. Cooley, "This is a true story. Bam-Bam's Python really is still twist-tied to the drug paraphernalia and weapons board in the Benton County courthouse, and yes, indeed, said sheriff did get his fool legs broke in the manner indicated." And those two things aren't even really what the story's about.

More Dead Than Alive, by Marty Smith {editorial}

What happened to screw up LT this time, in case anyone cares. Also contains the upcoming themes, so you should read at least the last three paragraphs.


Monday, Oct. 9:

Din of Iniquity, by Kyle Sundby {anecdote}

A former Marine indulges his natural tendency to be a pussy by playing with the kind of gun that won't hurt babies' ears. That said, sometimes it's hard to put the well-tuned professionalism of the battle-tested soldier completely behind you - especially if your friend is being a total douche.

No Candy for Ruby, by Brooke Glass-O'Shea {essay}

"I get murderers out of prison. Or, at least, that's what I tell people. In reality, I'm not that good."


Our exploration of punching the clock, working for the weekend, and bringing home the bacon. Whether it's making copies at a law firm or sweating your way through customs with a dozen condoms full of cocaine up your ass, everybody has to take it from the man sometime.


Friday, May 27:

Caveat Emptor, You Little Bastards , by Sean Crespo {work in progress}

It's not every day you get offered the opportunity to develop a children's television program. Unless you live in Los Angeles, where such opportunities are routinely offered to random people milling around in front of methadone clinics at 5:30 am. No, I don't know why either.

Yes, I Drove the Ice Cream Truck; Sue Me, by Marty Smith {history}

The true story of what it's like to drive that godawful little sugar-wagon. I apologize for the music; trust me, it hurt me worse than it hurt you.


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

Yeah, this is a repeat too-- but for some reason all of a sudden we're getting zillions of hits from lindsayism.com. Plus, Lindsay updates faithfully with good timekillers, weird info, and sleazy celebrity gossip. Give her a second look.


Friday, May 20:

How To Really Get Your Hairbrush Clean, by Bronwyn Chiquonfatt {essay}

They don't make little stickers you can wear on your shirt that say, "Be Nice To Me; I Gave Head Today." Our correspondent discovers why, and, in the process, confronts the inevitable crappiness of human existence. With household hints!

The Indiscreet Bitterness of the Bourgeoisie, by Alena Nahabedian {essay}

The period between discovering that one is cursed with the unremunerative vocation of being a writer and realizing a living wage at that same craft can be a long one-- anywhere from a few years to the length of time it takes to observe, firsthand, the death of the Sun. One writer gives her views on how to kill time while waiting.


Friday, May 13

The Bull Ball Variations: Alternate Outcomes of a Joke, by Moses Robinson {unclassifiable}

Specifically designed to help you rejoice in the fact that you don't have to fight bulls for a living, this story/experiment/prank/WTFever explores the perfectly rational ramifications of a pefectly normal set of circumstances that happen to involve one man eating another's testes. Happens every day.

Footprayer, by Craig Wright {fiction}

Some writers write, and some writers write about writing. This week's fiction correspondent does both simultaneously, in a fashion reminiscent of John Barth. Those who consider themselves too clever to read fiction should consider this.


Friday, May 6

So Even the Blind Can Hate Them, Part Deux, by Alena Nahabedian {essay}

The second in a two-part series about real-life Paris, this essay is nominally about how Parisians earn enough money to survive in a city where a package of ramen costs the equivalent of 75 U.S. dollars. In actuality, like all of this author's stories, it's about buying illegal drugs on the street.

Let There Be, by Bronwyn Chiquonfatt {pseudoscience}

For some reason, this one is about drugs as well. But scientific work is still work, and the area of sociology that covers groups of 6 to 8 people gathered in a single bathroom is one that, till now, has been sorely neglected by the academy.


This month in Lime Tea, we pay tribute to the undeniable appeal of the arrogant bastard, the cocksure, self-centered prick, and every person who's ever walked by you on the street with that unmistakable, unshakable confidence in the absolute perfection of their hairstyle. We love them, we hate them, we want to kill them and be them: the cool jerks.


Friday, April 29

Don't Stop Believin', by Juliette Guilbert {history}

The fondest hope of a middle-school -aged girl is to hook up with a guy over 18. Unfortunately, the type of 18-year old guy who hooks up with middle-school girls is, aside from his ability to slightly increase the net total of lesbians in the world, pretty much useless. Our correspondent dodges a bullet she didn't even realize was headed her way till years later.

Time For Games, by David Meiklejohn {fiction}

There's a fine line between "fascinating character" and "the reason God made restraining orders." Sometimes the difference can be something as simple as whether or not the individual in question is likely to be sleeping on your couch. A story you're sure to enjoy-- just make sure you've locked your doors.


Friday, April 22

So Even the Blind Can Hate Them, by Alena Nahabedian {essay}

Aside from being right about the war, inventing culture, and helping us found our country, what have the French ever done for us? A traveller tells us what it's like getting the hairy eyeball from residents of the world's second-most arrogant nation.

The Aquarium, by Sari Heifetz {fiction}

Is he the angel you're hoping for, or a fiend in human shape? Sometimes you have to take the chance. One of Lime Tea's most patient authors explores this delicate balance, using that broken-up multi-part stucture we seem to like so much.


Friday, April 15

Locals, by Leigh Graham {fiction}

As Tom Waits so eloquently put it, at first it's "hubba-hubba-hubba and a ring-a-ding-ding; baby, you've got everything." Two weeks later, it's "hubba-hubba-hubba and a ring-a-ding-dong; baby, sure didn't last too long." A too-brief affair in two brief acts.


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

The seven coolest people on the web outside of David Bowie have a sort of joint blog-thing called Repress Yourself, and it's freaking awesome.


Friday, April 8

Revealed! The True Origins of Lime Tea!, by Marty Smith, et al. {history}

There's a fine line between being a sonofabitch and telling it like it is, and we think it's about time somebody around here crossed it. The all-true story of how Lime Tea began-- read it now, before the restraining orders come in.

Cool Jerk Quintet, by Deborah Stoll {manifesto}

An oblique homage to this month's theme subject, in five parts. Nice and short; it will provide you with a breath of fresh air after some of the long-winded, bile-soaked screeds you read on the net these days.


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

This week we're not even going to tell you what we picked. You're just going to have to see for yourself.


Friday, April 1

Swiss Cake Rolls vs. the Iowa Writers' Workshop, by Marty Smith {editorial}

As far as we're concerned, this isn't even close to being a fair fight, and if you know us as well as we think you do, we're pretty sure you've got a good idea of who we're putting our money on. Or, rather, your money, if you don't mind sporting us a sawbuck on a sure thing.

Go Climb Up A Tree, by Sean Pravica {manifesto}

Sometimes, you could give a rat's ass what anybody thinks. Especially when, for whatever reason, what you think has become unaccountably important to others. An author who knows how to mind his own business makes some suggestions on how others might mind theirs.


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

Defenestration is an online litmag that is never afraid to overreach, with pieces that are nice and short.


Sometimes the most appropriate action is simply to scream, cry, break crockery, or haul an assault rifle to the nearest tall building and wait for the riot squad to settle it. Even if you've never taken things quite that far, March is your month to bask in the reflected glory of those who have-- or empathize with those who've stood by in mute horror while others did. Let's go crazy.


Friday, March 25

Walking Spanish, by Alena Nahabedian {history}

Want to have a lovely, Hemingwayesque/lost-generation-style retreat to Spain to restore your tissues? Go for it-- just don't be surprised if the locals don't appreciate your literary fantasy. Also known as "getting killed in Spain."

Big City Steve, by Meg Van Huygen {history}

Just because the crazy uncle is a total cliché doesn't mean that some people don't actually have a crazy uncle. Was it Vietnam, child abuse, or plain old vanilla heroin that drove lifer carnie Steve round the bend?


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

Gainesville, Florida's Identity Theory is a solid read for those who've been complaining that the Link of the Week is always the blog of some total stranger we have an intellectual crush on.


Friday, March 11

I Sing The Body Delusional, or, Mass Hysteria Comes to the Great Plains, by Marty Smith {history}

Don't give up; believe in yourself; light up the sky like a flame-- the 80s were all about being whatever you wanted if you just tried hard enough. But where do you draw the line between "holding on tight to your dream" and "frantically clinging to a hopelessly lost cause?"

The Truth About Peeps, by Deborah Stoll {history}

It's said that when you press your ear to the marshmallow-fluff confections known as Peeps, you can hear the winds of madness howling-- God only knows what might happen if you actually ate one. A woman is driven to the brink by these quasi-edible demon-spawn.


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

Updated daily, The Black Table is what every little online magazine wants to be when it grows up.


Friday, March 4

Casanova Frankenstein, by Meg van Huygen {history}

What's not to love about a 6' 7" stranger who gets you in his car and then can't shut up about how he's going to take you back to his apartment, hack you to bits, and pack you into twenty-seven separate Mason jars?

What She Was Told, by Andrea Lambert {fiction}

Someone once said, "Nothing good happens after 2 am." That doesn't mean you can't look for answers in desperate, coke-fueled predawn couplings-- it just means you won't find any. Read it and weep, sucker.


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

Steve Douglass's Steveblog is spazzy, inconsistent, and frequently hilarious.


This month in Lime Tea, tales of family, genetics, and the ties that bind, gag, and leave for dead. Blood is, indeed, thicker than water... and a hell of a lot harder to get out of the carpet.


Friday, February 25

Ketchup is the Lowest Form of Condiment, by Brangien Davis {history}

A childhood tale featuring the world's most clapped-out one-in-a-million car. Plus, of course, the contention featured in the title-- you've got to love a Dad who can get in an argument about culinary aesthetics with a four-year-old and almost lose.

When Armenians Attack!, by Alena Nahabedian {history}

Okay, technically it's not Armenians per se, but slavering, vicious, half-wild Armenian dogs the size of adolescent moose. Still, this story features blood, violence, and the sounds of rending flesh. Armenia, Transylvania; what's the diff?


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

Brian Minter's Bears Will Attack features what amounts to a daily column-- clever, thoughtful, and usually hilarious.


Friday, February 18

The Case of the Disappearing Sandwich , by Darci Ratliff {history}

As any number of ex-presidents could tell you (if they were alive, and you were the sort of person who talks to ex-presidents), it's never the crime that gets you, it's the attempted coverup. The story of a lie that couldn't be taken back.

The Changing Light, by Craig Wright {fiction}

What if you died and nothing changed-- at least, not right away? In this promising short, a man finds that wrapping your mind around mortality is in some ways harder than putting your head through a brick wall.


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

Matthew Tobey's The City of Floating Blogs is like sharing a beer with your more raffish, entertaining friends.


Friday, February 11

Curse of the Mud F--kers, by Daniel Thomas {history}

Some people are just born lucky, a fact which has absolutely no bearing on this true-life tale of modern hedonism, turn-of-the-century gunplay, and medieval chivalry (or lack thereof). Our correspondent traces his family's ill fortunes through history.

What Did You Do With Your Life, by Arlene Tribbia {fiction}

A man of science reflects upon spirituality, work, and the pros and cons of growing up to be everything your mother hoped for. Only in this case, he'll need to reflect fast, because time (and possibly space) appear to be running out. You do the math.


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

One of the Net's most well-respected creative writing sites, Pindeldyboz has stories from just about everybody who's anybody in online lit.


Friday, February 4

An Open Letter to Everyone's Mom , by Marty Smith {editorial}

Lime Tea could be funnier than Punch, cleverer than The New Yorker, cooler than Vice, bigger than Jesus, and Better Than Ezra if it were not for one insurmountable obstacle: your Mom.


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

Lots of content, lots of links, Jenny Miller's Heck's Kitchen will keep you busy with your Busy Box.


As of 2005, Lime Tea comes out every Friday with a few stories, rather than bimonthly with a whole bunch. Join us here each week, my friends; you're sure to get a smile.


Friday, January 28

Faith and Barbera and Me, by Martha Fletcher {history}

Part 2 of a series we didn't tell you was in two parts until we were sure we were actually going to get to publish the second one. Another tale of what hysterical teenaged diaries call "forbidden longings," we call it "the kind of crap teenagers have to put up with."

Some Notes on Proving the Existence of God, by Marty Smith {essay}

For a guy who can never be bothered to show up for anything, God sure does manage to get his name in the papers a lot. An essayist decides to call the Deity out once and for all-- if he gets his face slapped so be it, so long as it leaves a mark with visible stigmata.


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

The site we wanted to pick this week appears to be on vacation, so we'll save them for sometime when they're dressed and ready to receive visitors. In the meantime, check out the Million Writers Award. If you read little magazines like this one, perhaps you'll have a story you saw in the past year you'd like to nominate. And, no, we're not trying to drop a hint. Well, not much, anyway.


Friday, January 21

The Sign, by Alena Nahabedian {fiction}

Everyone has waited for a sign from God at one time or another-- you just better hope it's not the one the reads, "We Reserve the Right to Refuse Service to Anyone." And you thought arguing with the bartender was a waste of time.

Vampire Lesbians of Sodom, by Martha Fletcher {history}

A young girl's hardcore fundamentalist parents encounter the ultimate evil, and send it to bed without any supper. Looks like she'll have to find something to eat on her own. A mostly true story of the banality of evil, and the evil of banality.


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

Just about the cutest of the online little magazines, Kittenpants runs pieces that are short, funny, and don't take themselves too seriously.


Friday, January 14

BABEL, by David Meiklejohn {fiction}

If there were such a thing as Cubist storytelling, this story might very well be it. Of course, there isn't any such thing, so you may have to give up on labeling things and think for a minute. Architecture vs. God vs. language in a tag-team grudge match.

My Supplication, by Andrea Lambert {catechism}

If Keane had painted junkies as big-eyed, soulful waifs, the narrator of this piece would have five or six of them on her couch. As it is, she's got two or three. Look what followed me home-- can I keep him?


Link of the Week, picked by LT staff

Ever gotten online and wondered (in the phrase TV made ubiquitous), "What's on?" Well, lindsayism.com knows.


Friday, January 7

10 Notes on the Absence of God, by Robert Gaulke {list}

If there is no God, how can He possibly manage to annoy us in so many ways? A writer meditates on cycling daily from womb to tomb and back again, with obligatory nods to cloning and Ukrainian hotties.

The Wait, by Alexis Wiggins {fiction}

Like foxholes, oncology wards are notably atheist-free. Even if (perhaps even especially if) you have only moments to live, you've got time to enjoy this short-short from a promising young American writer.


Link of the Week for Jan. 7, picked by LT staff

Ronnie Cordova's non-blog sublethal.net provides a near-daily dose of delightful irascibility. (He's not nearly as lazy as we are.)

 

 

 
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