Sunday, 12 July 2026

:SPITTING INTO THE WIND by S. NadjaN Zajdman,Canada Dry ginger ale

It was late in March of 2025 when I received an e-mail from the assistant publisher of the Chicken Soup for the Soul anthology series, inviting me to a Zoom meeting being held for the U.S. publishing empire’s “Canadian contributors.”  Having “contributed” several stories over the years, I discovered that I was on a list.  For those located overseas or on another planet, Chicken Soup for the Soul anthologies are compilations of feel-good stories written not only by serious writers looking to build a portfolio, but mostly by civilians thrilled to see their names in print.  Chicken soup has been called Jewish penicillin, so the stated intention of these themed collections is one of healing and “changing the world one story at a time.”  The themed anthologies have been lauded as panaceas for stress-filled lives.

 Upon acceptance, one receives a small cheque—in U.S. bucks—and ten copies of the anthology in which one’s material appears.  In 2017, when I had two stories accepted in the special anniversary anthology called The Spirit of Canada, I was sent twenty copies.  I couldn’t give away twenty copies.  I couldn’t give away ten copies.  In lieu of all these copies, I would’ve preferred a larger cheque. 

According to this e-mail, the purpose of the proposed meeting, to be hosted by the publisher, was to apologize for the behavior of their government. “Virtually every American feels the same way.”  They do?  I wondered.  Then who were the phantom 77,000 voters who brought a gangster to power and unleashed madness?  Behind the plea I suspected self-interest. I was skeptical, yet receptive.  An inquiring mind wants to know, so I accepted the invitation to the meeting.

The publisher and editor-in-chief is a magna cum laude graduate of Harvard.  She  worked as a Wall Street analyst, a hedge fund manager and a corporate executive before taking on the presidency of Chicken Soup. 

When I zoomed in, precisely on the scheduled hour, the meeting was already in progress. Chicken Soup’s president was in the process of apologizing for somewhere erroneously writing PQ (Province of Quebec) as PB.  When my name appeared in a box on the screen, knowing I am in Montreal, she apologized to me personally.

At first, I kept my camera off.  Then I decided to show my face.  I had nothing to hide.  Besides the publisher and the assistant publisher, there were a handful of Canadian attendees.  Most had their cameras on.  One didn’t.  More had been invited, but many declined; some angrily, telling Chicken Soup in no uncertain terms that they wanted their names removed from its mailing list.

After the Harvard graduate apologized for misspelling PQ, she shared with her audience her love of Canada, which took the form of vacations she and her family   have enjoyed up here, the most recent being taken by her daughter, who is a doctor in New Hampshire, and who loves the cold. Her daughter the doctor visited with (one assumes) the doctor’s husband.  “They came up for a romantic night in Montreal.”  Only one night?  I thought of Benjamin Franklin.  In historic Old Montreal, tucked away on a cobblestoned alley, there is an ancient building upon whose door rests a plaque announcing, “Benjamin Franklin Slept Here.”  Benjamin Franklin slept here for three nights.  This was back in 1812, which was the last time the Americans attempted to liberate us.  Upon studying the locals and surveying the scene, the Founding Father surmised, “We don’t have to conquer the Canadians.  We can buy them.”

Having established her bona fides, the publisher then confessed that Chicken Soup was in trouble, or potentially in trouble.  “Readers think of Chicken Soup as an American publication, but our production is tied up with Canada.  Most of our printing is done in Canada.”  Of course it would be.  The rate of exchange between the U.S. buck and the Canadian loony makes it an attractive option. “We may have to cancel our children’s picture book series.”  The publisher then had a lightbulb moment.  “We may have to cancel our Canadian series!”  I also had a lightbulb moment.  Was she issuing a threat?

The publisher then asked for “suggestions” on how to keep a Canadian audience.  One woman piped up.  “You could publish more stories about Canada!”  Self-interest works both ways.

            “I thought of that.” admitted the publisher.  “But then I thought readers might think I was being manipulative.”  Oh say it isn’t so!  Why would anyone think that?

            I decided to weigh in.  I raised my hand.  I started to speak.

             “Through no fault of their own, my compatriots are facing ruin, and they accept it.  They accept that we are in a state of war.”  I tried to break it gently.  “Under the circumstances, do you believe that the fate of one publishing company is considered relevant?”  

“But only half of us voted for him!” protested the American.  She didn’t protest in the streets, but on Zoom, she protested.

Not only did half your countrymen cast their vote for a convicted felon, an obvious sociopath and a brazen rapist, but they did it TWICE.  What kind of people exhibit such appalling lack of judgement?  How can they be trusted?  I thought, but did  not say.

“And anyway,” the publisher continued to protest, “If Canada imposes tariffs on books, we’ll have to retaliate!”  Was that a slip of the tongue, or a Freudian slip?  Was she aware it was Russia which invaded the Ukraine, and not the other way around?  Was she conscious?

“I am the daughter of Holocaust survivors.”  I revealed.  “I am alert and sensitive to fascist threats and assaults on freedom.”

In response, the publisher revealed that she is Jewish and launched into a long, Trump-like ramble on how she removed her information from a certain website because she feared anti-Semitic attacks.  If this revelation was meant to establish common ground, it wasn’t working.

“If nothing else,” I conceded, “your president was transparent.  Before the election he clearly stated, ‘From Day One, I will be a dictator.’”

“Yes, our president did many things he said he was going to do.  But he never said he was going to do this!”  “This” referred to the imposition of tariffs.  To the publisher it seemed acceptable to dismantle a republic as long as her business wasn’t adversely affected. 

“You asked for suggestions.”  I sighed.  “I suggest impeachment.”

“Oh that was tried twice and it didn’t work!” The publisher scoffed.  “Impeachment isn’t going to happen!”

On my monitor, I stared at the square which held the image of the assistant publisher, who sat stone-faced.  I knew she wasn’t Jewish.  I learnt that years ago, when one of my stories was published in a Chicken Soup anthology whose theme was holiday celebrations.  My story told the tale of childhood Passovers.  Every year the angel Elijah, the patron saint of children, visited the home in which our family Seders were held.   The angel Elijah is a sort of Jewish Santa, except that he is invisible.  Each year I was instructed not only to open the door for the angel so he could partake of the wine prepared for him, but also to accompany him back to the door when he was ready to leave.  One year, I balked at this errand.  In his fifth language, my whimsical, wonderfully imaginative Daddy didn’t hesitate to invoke idioms, mix metaphors, and play with words.  “It’s not polite to let a guest leave alone.”  Impishly, my Yiddishe Poppa added, “With an angel, you have to be a gentleman.”

Daddy’s punchline almost cost me the publication.  A call came from California. 

“Are you a man, or a woman?!”  The assistant publisher challenged.  This was in the days before people signed themselves “She/her” or “He/him.”

Placed on the defense, I could do nothing except insist I was female.  From the sound of my voice, I was either telling the truth, or I was a boy whose—ahh-- voice had yet to drop. 

Not only was my gender placed in question, but my credibility was placed in question, including whether or not my story was fact or a work of fiction.  Chicken Soup’s mandate is to publish true stories. 

In my head, I could hear my father’s response.  I could see him shaking his Yiddishe kop and musing, “Oysh.  A goyishe kop!” Literally, a goyische kop translates as “a Gentile head.” Google translates it as “an idiot” but I prefer
 to interpret the expression as someone who is literal-minded.  Someone lacking in imagination.

Finally giving me the benefit of the doubt, the assistant publisher accepted that I was a woman and that my story was true though, if memory serves, she cut the questionable line in order not to confuse readers.  Unlike me and its head honcho, Chicken Soup’s readers were assumed to be and have goyishe kops. 

Upon hearing that one of his best lines was being cut, Daddy would’ve roared with sardonic laughter. Then he would’ve ground the assistant publisher into matzah meal. He might’ve told her, You dunt like mein ponchline? So you can poot matzah balls in your ‘Chicken Soup!’

‘Nuf said.  Back to our story. 

Because no feasible suggestions were forthcoming, the American publisher made one of her own.  She ventured to suggest that her Canadian contributors contact journalists and exhort them to write “human interest stories” in order to help save the publishing monolith.  The president of Chicken Soup, the former Wall Street analyst, hedge fund manager and corporate executive appealed to and attempted to recruit “Canadian contributors” into serving as public relations volunteers.  And she succeeded.  The handful of Canadian attendees rallied ‘round the flag, almost crying, “I’ll do it!  I’ll do it!  Thank you for your bravery and compassion!”

Bravery?  Perhaps there was a touch in bravery in summoning a Canadian audience, if only through Zoom.  Still, the Ukrainians are braver.

Compassion?  I heard no compassion.  What I heard was panic, fear, self-interest, and an inordinate amount of self-pity.  I didn’t expect to hear it so soon.  I assumed it would be only after American society fully self-destructed that its survivors, like the Germans in 1945, would point a finger at the diabolical Pied Piper who led them to ruin and wail, “We were betrayed!”

I felt frustrated and frozen out by the soft-hearted Canadian attendees, who seemed suddenly to have been stricken with Stockholm Syndrome.  If they could've reached through their screens and hugged the American publisher, they would have.  The compassionate Canadian attendees failed to see that the emperor had no clothes.  In the past, I might’ve reacted the same way.  In the past, whenever American society has gone off the rails, it has done so out of ignorance, arrogance or naivetĂ©But this time is different.  This time we are not only witnessing but also being subjected to evil.

Realizing that I was spitting into the wind, I “left” the meeting and lay on my sofa, communing with my long-dead dad.  Dad is always in my heart, and he has been on my mind a lot, these days.  Not all my ancestors were murdered by the Germans.  Dad’s eldest brother, an uncle I would never know, was slaughtered by the Russians on the killing grounds of Katyn.  He wasn’t shot for being a Jew.  He was one of 22,000 Polish officers rounded up and nightly dispatched with bullets to the back of their heads because they were perceived as potential threats to an authoritarian regime. 

My dad was luckier.  He survived Stalin’s Soviet Union and ultimately crossed the ocean, becoming a stranger in a strange land.  As the proverbial fish out of water, Dad didn’t take peace and freedom for granted.  He would’ve been horrified at the prospect of his children and grandchildren coming under threat by the puppets and descendants of a variant regime.

I thought of the words of Dad’s contemporary, John F. Kennedy, whom he deeply admired.  We shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty.

Finally, I understand what these words mean.

About the author

 Nadja Zajdman is a Canadian author. In 2022 she published the story collection The Memory Keeper, as well as the memoir I Want You To Be Free. In 2023 Zajdman followed up with a second memoir, Daddy's Remains. 2024 saw the publication of Zajdman's essay collection, Between Worlds. 

Did you enjoy the story? Would you like to shout us a coffee?. Half of what you pay goes to the author the oher half goes to expense se.g. Maintaining hthe web site and setting up The Best of Café Lit book each year.



Saturday, 11 July 2026

Saturday Sample:Something Very Human by Hannah Retallick , cola

p> 

A Long Line of Plastic Straws

 

 

Carter, a nine-year-old who had recently moved to 4 Woodland Road, compensated for everything by trying to connect the longest line of plastic straws in the world. The obsession started at McDonald’s, where his grandma took him every Saturday. She sat Carter down at a booth while she queued for the Happy Meal. It was a box of food and a boring toy; what was Happy about that? He did like his frosty chocolate milkshake, but not as much as the paper-covered straws. He blew the wrappers across the room. Grandma couldn’t ask Carter to pick them up, so she did it herself and tottered to the bin. Carter scrunched one end of a straw and inserted it into the other.

He started the project in the garage, which smelled like cardboard and dust, on a long folding table; judging by its rickety groaning joints, it had been unloved since Grandpa died. On a hot day there was even a lingering hint of his musky aftershave.

Each week, Carter picked up more and more straws, grabbing them from the McDonald’s dispenser while Grandma Chrissie supported his arm. She never told him to stop stuffing them into his hoodie pouch.

Their house was the first of a three-house terrace, right at the edge of the village. Their garden was overgrown now Grandpa wasn’t there and had a low-lying fence separating them from the neighbour. The garage soon became too small for Carter’s venture; he asked Grandma Chrissie to help by taking the straws outside.

Carter tucked his good leg underneath him and stretched the other out. He missed being able to feel his foot and sometimes woke at night, thinking he still could, but then he remembered. Working in the garden, it was too easy for his mind to wander. He tried to focus on other things, like the dampness of the grass and the rustling sound from a hedge, which was trimmed neatly on the neighbour’s side.

‘Quite a project you have there,’ his grandma said, shielding her eyes from the stark cloud-filtered light.

And then she returned to the house. She hardly left it, apart from to check on Carter. She didn’t do her own food shopping now; what was the point when the Tesco delivery service was so obliging? Carter had to ask what obliging meant. She said, ‘Obliging is when people make things good for you.’

He glanced at the house. His grandmother was obliging, and calm. She never talked about any of it.

‘Hello,’ came a voice.

Carter jumped. The voice came from the next garden, the direction of the sun. All he could see through looking at the light was a shadow above the neighbour’s fence and the red specks and dark patches in his own eyes.

‘Hello?’ Once Carter had shielded his eyes with his hand, he could see a boy about his age who was leaning on the fence, making it creak and groan.

‘What are you doing?’ the boy asked.

He felt silly when he told him. ‘I’m… I’m making the longest line of plastic straws in the world.’

But Billy didn’t seem to think it was silly. ‘Cool. How long does that have to be?’

‘Erm, long. Really long.’

‘Why don’t you do it underground?’ Billy suggested.

Carter bristled. ‘I can’t, it’s plastic. That’s bad for the earth.’

Billy climbed over the fence, landed softly, and darted over to where Carter sat. He joined him, mirroring his position, with one leg stretched out in front and the other tucked under him.

‘What happened to your foot?’ Billy asked, in the matter-of-fact voice that no one else used with Carter. ‘I’ve seen you…’

‘It was trapped in the car.’ Carter touched one of his crutches. 

‘Okay…’ Billy nodded slowly. ‘You know, my mum has a big box of straws in the cupboard for when we have parties. I could ask her?’

Billy’s mum was a nice lady called Tara. She smelled like roses and felt soft and plump when she hugged him, which she did as soon as Billy made the introduction at the doorway of their house. Carter’s own mother had always been a hugger too and helped him with his homework and took him to play football at the Green, back when he had two proper feet to use and… but he didn’t have to worry about that at the moment because the adults decided he should have time to ‘process everything’.

Tara was happy to help and presented a box of straws that were a mixture of colours, to make a change from the white ones with thin coloured lines.

‘Actually,’ said Carter, holding the box of straws. ‘I think I’ll stick with the McDonald’s ones.’

Billy’s mother just smiled and told them to have fun.

Billy helped Carter connect the straws. It was not long before the line stretched over Carter’s whole garden and under the fence. Tara provided cans of Fanta and Grandma came to say hello, perhaps checking if Billy was ‘suitable company’.

‘Where are your parents?’ asked Billy, dragging a chipped terracotta pot to pin down a section.

‘I’m living with Grandma.’

‘Oh.’

‘Where’s your dad?’ asked Carter.

‘Mum says he scarpered when I was little.’

‘What’s scarpered?’

‘Ran away cos he didn’t want us.’

Carter tried to imagine what this would be like. ‘Oh…’

‘Yeah.’

Carter’s dad hadn’t ‘scarpered’. He’d held his mum’s hand and his whenever he could. Dad said it was to make sure no one got lost, but Carter didn’t think that was it; he just liked them being connected.

      The straw line progressed quickly; Billy’s kind mother started taking Billy to McDonald’s at the same time as Carter and his grandma, doubling the number of straws they were able to sneak out.

‘We really shouldn’t let them,’ said Chrissie, on their second visit.

‘No, we really shouldn’t, should we…’ Tara chomped into a Big Mac and put her hand under her chin to stop the trickle of sauce in its tracks.

The two women smiled at each other and said no more. They had never really talked before Carter came to stay, but now they often had a cuppa and chat together, initially over the garden fence. Then they started going inside, especially on rainy days. Grandma and Tara would sit downstairs while Carter and Billy played in each other’s rooms – video games, mostly, though they also liked to construct big Lego towers. Yet their ‘great big straw line’, as Tara called it, was their favourite thing to do together. The plan had been going so well; they had nearly reached the other side of Billy’s garden.

Then one Saturday, everything changed.

 

Carter knew something was wrong the moment he felt the straws at McDonald’s; they were lighter, flimsier. He unwrapped one, slowly, put it into his Coke, and after only a few minutes, the straw began to soften and his heart thumped harder.

‘Billy,’ he whispered. ‘Billy, look.’

He drew out the straw, which made a screeching sound as it left the claws of the plastic lid. It was limp and starting to break.

*

Carter’s crutches swished through the overgrown grass until he was just a couple of feet from Billy’s neighbour’s fence. They had discussed only earlier that morning how they would knock on the old man’s door, ask if he would let them carry on in his garden, but now it wasn’t possible: McDonald’s had changed their straws from plastic to paper.

‘I guess that’s it then,’ said Billy.

‘Yeah.’

‘How did your foot get trapped in the car?’ he asked, suddenly.

This time, Carter gave the real answer. His parents had told him many times not to squeeze his leg between the seat and the door.

‘And then the lorry hit us. And then I woke up in hospital. And then…’

They would never tell him off again.

‘Your parents died, didn’t they?’

It was the first time Carter had cried about it; it was the first time anyone had said ‘died’.

‘And now my foot doesn’t work. And I can’t do the straws anymore because of stupid Maccies.’

Billy threw his arms around Carter. It knocked the crutches out of his hands, but with Billy gripping so hard, he didn’t fall. Billy didn’t smell of roses like his mother and wasn’t soft; he was sticky and skinny.

‘It’s okay…’ Billy didn’t sound like he believed himself. ‘At least the paper straws won’t hurt the earth. You know?’

Carter nodded, banging his chin on Billy’s bony shoulder. He broke the hug, squatted to the floor on one leg, and wiped his nose, leaving a trail on his sleeve. ‘I guess so.’

‘It’ll be okay.’

‘You’re obliging, Billy.’

They sat there, silently. Carter glanced towards the house and wondered what the adults were talking about – maybe Grandpa, the car accident, or Tara’s man. Or maybe they were talking about plastic straws. All that potential.

‘Billy,’ said Carter.

‘Yeah?’

‘I’ve been thinking about towers.’

Find Your copy here 

About the author 

Hannah Retallick is a twenty-seven-year-old from Anglesey, North Wales. She was home educated and then studied with the Open University, graduating with a First-class honours degree, BA in Humanities with Creative Writing and Music, before passing her Creative Writing MA with a Distinction. She was shortlisted in the Writing Awards at the Scottish Mental Health Arts Festival 2019, the Cambridge Short Story Prize, the Henshaw Short Story Competition June 2019, the Bedford International Writing Competition 2019, the Crossing the Tees book festival competition 2020, and the Fish Publishing Short Story Prize 2021.

https://www.hannahretallick.co.uk/

 


 

Friday, 10 July 2026

Night Time EconomybyPpenny Rogers, a mug of cold coffee

p> 

Night Time Economy

 

I went to bed at 8.30. Mind you I didn’t get home until 7.45, it had been one of those nights. The birds were singing, no, shouting, as I staggered up the road and I remember saying something that was meant to be good morning to the bloke two doors up who was walking his dog.

            ‘Heavy night Jen?’ he asked.

            ‘The usual.’

            ‘Perhaps you ought to try…’ his words were a blur as I fumbled for my key.

The house was blessedly quiet: no loud shouts, no shrieks, no thump, thump, thump. There was a glass by the kitchen sink; I filled it and emptied it in one go, refilled it and took it upstairs. My head ached, but then so did my neck and my arms. What had I been doing? Why was there a bruise on my forearm that was rapidly spreading and turning darker even as I looked at it? My phone buzzed.

‘Hello Mum. Yes, I’m home. What did you hear on the radio? Yeah, I’m fine, I’ll call you later.’

Don’t get into bed I told myself, have a pee first and it might be an idea to clean your teeth, mouth feels like the floor of a bird cage. At last, soiled, crumpled clothes on the floor and a pillow under my head.

I woke up at about 1.30. The afternoon sun shone encouragingly through the curtains. Five hours and I’d start doing it all over again. In the shower a life without all this seemed quite attractive. Better hours, more money in the bank, less stress, less danger. But last night Jazi made it and Cal went to rehab.

Just time to put the washing machine on, do some baked beans on toast and drink coffee. Tomorrow I’ll try to go to the supermarket. And perhaps tonight won’t be so long. Maybe, just maybe I’ll leave early or at least before they make me go home. The bruise has stopped spreading up my arm and is turning that sort of purple colour that you sometimes see at sunset. I can discern the shape of a man’s thumb in the centre of it; I sipped another coffee and wondered, could I have handled it differently? Probably not, my head was already swimming by then.

Dressed and ready to go. Check hair, make up, bag (must get more tissues). Text Mum, tell her I’m fine and not to worry. I’ll see her asap. I have time to walk; the fresh air will do me good. Going in I meet Will. ‘Are you OK? I was worried about you. We seem to be getting more aggressive bastards, but they don’t always make the headlines like that one did.’

‘Thanks for asking, I’m fine.’

 He smiles at me. Together we follow the signs to accident and emergency

About the author

 

 

enny Rogers lives in Dorset in the south of England. She writes mostly short stories, flash fiction and poems and facilitates an informal writing group. She is a regular contributor to CafĂ©Lit. When she’s not writing Penny makes jams, pickles and preserves from home grown or foraged produce. 

you enjoy the story? Would you like to shout us a coffee?. Half of what you pay goes to the author the oher half goes to expense se.g. Maintaining hthe web site and setting up The Best of Café Lit book each year.