Comfort Others
/Southern Food columnist, L. Kasimu Harris, has learned that hard way that when you’re broke, depressed, or heartbroken, you still have to eat. And you still need to feed others.
Read MoreEssays, opinions, commentary, criticism, and fiction from Southern writers.
Southern Food columnist, L. Kasimu Harris, has learned that hard way that when you’re broke, depressed, or heartbroken, you still have to eat. And you still need to feed others.
Read MoreTwo Morehouse grads leave investment-banking jobs in New York and come home to Atlanta to help small-business owners get investment capital in neighborhood were banks seldom make loans. And it's working.
Read MoreHow did people like Danica Roem manage to win in Southern elections last week? They knocked on thousands of doors — and actually listened when they were opened.
Read MoreTarronia Ball — the Tank of New Orleans’ Tank and the Bangas — reminds us how “freakin’ beautiful” life is.
Read MoreSouthern Schooling columnists Adam Jordan and Todd Hawley bring in an expert (who happens also to be Adam’s wife, Kasey) to talk about the critical importance of school nurses in public education.
Read MoreAtlanta is about to elect a new mayor. What does that mean for a city where hip-hop music and culture are major economic exports?
Read MoreYou already know that Southern music changes the world. It appears that Southern music technology is about to do the same.
Read MoreWinston-Salem is mostly known for its universities and ties to tobacco farming, but in recent years, it’s undergone a transformation into a drinking destination.
Read MoreIt was a lovely autumn day on the University of Florida campus. Mild temps, gentle breeze. A perfect setting for a few thousand people to gather and express a simple sentiment: Nazi Punks, F**k Off!
Read MoreNovelist Thomas Mullen, author of the great “Darktown” series and a lifelong sports fan, ponders whether any of us can “stay on the sidelines” this NFL season.
Read MoreA decade ago, Tom Lee's job was to get inside Bob Corker’s head as he ran for the U.S. Senate. Today, he tells us what Corker really means when he calls the White House an “adult day care center.”
Read MoreMore than 20 years ago, an Enterprise, Alabama, boy started brewing his own beer — an act that made him an outlaw of sorts at the time. Today, Wayne Wambles is the brewmaster of Tampa-based Cigar City Brewing — one of the South’s best loved and most successful craft brewers.
Read MoreAfter writing a feature story for us about how Knoxville’s arts scene drives the city’s economy, Rob Rushin follows up with a look at the numbers — and some recommendations for communities that want to nurture their own arts economies.
Read MoreWriting songs that are truly great is a hard enough job. Writing a perfect song is rare indeed. But in this remembrance of Tom Petty, Drive-By Truckers co-founder Patterson Hood argues that Petty achieved perfection repeatedly, perhaps more than any other Southern-born songwriter.
Read MoreTodd Hawley and Adam Jordan argue that teachers and parents have a unique opportunity in these troubled times — to lead a new revolution against racism.
Read MoreKapri Robinson grew up in Buford, Georgia — and not in a royal family — but now, the young woman wears the crown among Washington bartenders.
Read MoreTardy for repast, and not expecting much else in town, it was a wonderful surprise to find terrific dining options in Columbus, Georgia.
Read MoreMississippi’s Michael Farris Smith is one of the South’s greatest young novelists. His fiction shows us our region and ourselves with a striking, singular voice. He also spends his real life in Mississippi, and makes a strong argument that when it comes to politics, we all live in Mississippi now.
Read MoreSouthern startups are developing wearable technology to monitor head injuries, develop new medical treatments, and even to help dairy farmers keep their herds more productive and happy.
Read MoreMeet Ale Sharpton, who documents Georgia’s craft-beer scene in a language that suits Atlanta perfectly: the language of hip-hop.
Read MoreA new kind of magazine for a new kind of South.
THE BITTER SOUTHERNER ©2024 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.