Must-See Spots in Boston, MA

Zach Semel
| Memoir

 

Lush, 144 Newbury St., Boston, MA

When I heard the bombs go off, I was standing in this shop with a tiny box of their “solid toothpaste” in my hand. I instinctively stuffed it in my pocket, unpaid for, when I bolted out the door. A few weeks later, I pulled the box out of my bathroom cupboard and took out a toothpaste “tablet,” let it start to melt on my tongue before spitting it out.

That summer, I brought the toothpaste back, explaining why I’d accidentally stolen it, presenting it to the Lush staff like a recovered family heirloom being returned undamaged.

Steve Madden, 118 Newbury St., Boston, MA

Shops selling $400 shoes and $70 t-shirts with uninspiring designs. “New American” restaurants selling lobster, steak, risotto. Frozen yogurt. A few smaller, reclusive venues—a sex shop, comic books store, smoke shop—like scuffs on leather shoes. On this street, you can buy what you want to feel how you want. Lately I don’t look at my bank statements, don’t want to imagine there’s any limit to that possibility.

Lolita, 271 Dartmouth St., Boston, MA

My first flashback was near Lolita, a dark, hidden-away lounge near the finish line, its walls plastered with black skulls with red and orange eyes. Out the window of my Uber, I saw Boylston Street in the daytime, traffic cones and barriers forming an open lane for the runners—and then it was 10 pm again and soon I was on a date, drinking ginger-peach sangrias until I could touch a woman who I didn’t want touching me.

Had I been nestled in this bustling bar a few blocks from the finish line, the T rumbling below my table, would I have even heard the sound of a bomb, logged it in my brain like a mysterious but memorable chord? Had I been drunk that afternoon, would the memory of that day ever have hurt, ever been more than a party being broken up?

Casa Romero, 30 Gloucester St., Boston, MA

and MJ O’Connor’s, CGK, Joe’s American Grille: I really don’t mind it when you card me, even when my patchy beard has become a visible mess and I’m chatting with my friends about the plight that is teaching college students. Every time I buy a drink legally, I think of the inconvenience of finding alcohol when I was 17, of driving to strangers’ homes to get shitty vodka. I only learned years later about bartenders’ careful hands that can make the unpalatable palatable, the punishing taste pleasurable. Had someone put Mules and margaritas in my hands when I was 17 and could only think about the smallness of my future, I would’ve drank and drank until my present expanded, ballooned in my belly, became an unbridled, bankrupt circus.

 

Zach Semel (he/him) is a poet and essayist pursuing an MFA in Creative Writing at Northern Arizona University. Some of his previous work has appeared in DIAGRAM, the Brevity Blog, CutBank: All Accounts & Mixture, Drunk Monkeys, Flyway: Journal of Writing & Environment, The Nervous Breakdown, Wordgathering, FreezeRay Poetry, and other places. His hybrid chapbook “Let the tides take my body” was awarded the 2021 May Day Mountain Prize by Hunger Mountain.

Next
Patience
Previous
Salt River Canyon