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Lisa Taddeo

Forty-Two

April 2, 2015

Fiction from NER 36.1. 

[view as PDF]

http://www.berceau-des-sens.ch/restaurant/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Hendricks-photo1.jpgJoan had to look beautiful.

Tonight there was a wedding in goddamned Brooklyn, farm-to-table animals talking about steel cut oatmeal as though they invented the steel that cut it. In New York the things you hate are the things you do.

She worked out at least two hours a day. On Mondays and Tuesdays, which are the kindest days for older single women, she worked out as many as four. At six in the morning she ran to her barre class in leg warmers and black Lululemons size four. The class was a bunch of women squatting on a powder blue rug. You know the type, until you become one.

[Read more]

Lisa Taddeo is a contributor to Esquire and New York Magazine, among others. Her pieces have been anthologized in Best American Sports Writing and Best American Political Writing. She is currently at work on her debut nonfiction book for Simon & Schuster about desire and sexuality in America, and has just completed her first novel.

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Lisa Taddeo

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“A principled stance against aggression should never turn into blind hatred. Such hatred does not help anyone to win . . .”

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