The Book of Difficult Fruit
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The Book of Difficult Fruit by Kate Lebo
An ABC of unusual, unruly and misunderstood fruits: in twenty-six chapters, Kate Lebo blends personal, cultural and natural history with the best of food writing, in this unique book.
Darkly funny. . ”Deeply researched” doesn’t begin to describe how far into ancient texts and their subtexts, obscure cookbooks and corners of the internet Lebo excavated to tell us the stories of these fruits. What she digs up for each is often fascinating, sometimes juicy, rarely dry . . . The ingredients, like words, get thoughtfully measured and weighed and mixed into something delicious and meaningful. * New York Times *
Juicy tales . . . These 26 quirky essays . . . one for each letter of the alphabet, mix history, folklore, recipes and snippets from [Lebo's] life. * Daily Mail *
[A] richly researched food history, gentle memoir and left-field recipe book . . . It would be a shame if this book didn’t attract readers without an existing curiosity in the subject, because Lebo brings as generous an eye to its broader topics – relationships, reproductive health, illness and death – as she does her fruits and their histories and uses, their beauty and their terror. * i newspaper *
A zingy blend of natural, culinary and personal history. Notes on the medicinal properties of these fruits add a witchy kick, and recipes, too often a twee addition in narrative non-fiction, cover glue and sinus washes along with huckleberry pie. It’s a prickly, piquant delight. * Guardian *
From aronia to zucchini, The Book of Difficult Fruit takes readers on a journey across medicinal, aromatic, historical, cosmetic, culinary, and cultural borders. -- 'Electric Lit’s Favorite Nonfiction Books of 2021' * Electric Lit *
Weaving botanical and medicinal histories, relationships between people and land, and the idea of nourishment, this book (which includes recipes) is inventive and charming, but it’s also profound and deeply felt. The connection between food and land is never forgotten, and the writing is superb. * BuzzFeed *
[A] glorious mash-up of memoir, love note, and cookbook . . . Every sentence is as sensuous as the first bite into a cold, juicy plum. * Vulture *
Essayist, poet, and cookbook author Lebo undertakes an intriguing creative exercise in this wonder-filled book. Lovers of food and nature writing will appreciate Lebo's rangy, researched ode to wildness. * Booklist *
Kate Lebo has written a thorny and twisty memoir disguised as a compendium of problematic fruits (and grains, and stems, and seeds). She doesn't so much describe as confront her subjects: their poisonous pits, their treacherous thorns, their offensive odors and invasive roots. But her buckets of foraged berries, her tart jams, and her bright and potent cordials live in the real world alongside troubled families, rampant wildfires, and the prickly terror of a newfound tumor. Kate Lebo is the best kind of poet-naturalist: her writing is savage and lyrical and scientific all at once. The Book of Difficult Fruit is feral and fierce -- and I never thought I'd say that about a book on fruit. -- Amy Stewart, author of The Drunken Botanist
'Intriguing and beautiful . . . insightful and funny . . . Science and folklore co-exist comfortably together, with neither looking down on the other. -- Suzanne O'Sullivan, author of It's All In Your Head
With rich, puckery prose, Kate Lebo takes us on an engaging journey into her culinary world and offers surprisingly complex stories of neglected fruits that need a little more coaxing than your average blueberry. Here, too, are uncommon recipes for treats like faceclock coffee, gooseberry cheese, juniper bitters, and thimbleberry kvass. And Lebo even generously includes the osage orange. Its best use—ha! Read it and find out. -- Erik Larson
A gorgeous mixture of food writing, recipes and personal essay which innovates with form in the best way. -- Rebecca Tamás, author of Witch and Strangers
[A] dazzling, thorny new essay collection -- Samin Nosrat * New York Times *
A beautiful, fascinating read full of surprises – a real pleasure. -- Claudia Roden
I loved this sage and sensuous book, and was enraptured by its curious tour through a wunderkammer of plants, history, and personal narrative. Kate Lebo is a warm and erudite guide and her essays are ripe with illumination, enchantment, and a dash of the haunted. -- Melissa Febos, author of Girlhood
Unusual and piquant, this off-kilter collection will hit the spot with readers hungry for something a little different. * Publishers Weekly, starred review *
The one such book that’s held my attention has been The Book of Difficult Fruit, an inventive book that combines memoir, essays and recipes to such a compelling effect that I couldn’t put it down. -- 'Books We Love' * NPR *
Juicy tales . . . These 26 quirky essays . . . one for each letter of the alphabet, mix history, folklore, recipes and snippets from [Lebo's] life. * Daily Mail *
[A] richly researched food history, gentle memoir and left-field recipe book . . . It would be a shame if this book didn’t attract readers without an existing curiosity in the subject, because Lebo brings as generous an eye to its broader topics – relationships, reproductive health, illness and death – as she does her fruits and their histories and uses, their beauty and their terror. * i newspaper *
A zingy blend of natural, culinary and personal history. Notes on the medicinal properties of these fruits add a witchy kick, and recipes, too often a twee addition in narrative non-fiction, cover glue and sinus washes along with huckleberry pie. It’s a prickly, piquant delight. * Guardian *
From aronia to zucchini, The Book of Difficult Fruit takes readers on a journey across medicinal, aromatic, historical, cosmetic, culinary, and cultural borders. -- 'Electric Lit’s Favorite Nonfiction Books of 2021' * Electric Lit *
Weaving botanical and medicinal histories, relationships between people and land, and the idea of nourishment, this book (which includes recipes) is inventive and charming, but it’s also profound and deeply felt. The connection between food and land is never forgotten, and the writing is superb. * BuzzFeed *
[A] glorious mash-up of memoir, love note, and cookbook . . . Every sentence is as sensuous as the first bite into a cold, juicy plum. * Vulture *
Essayist, poet, and cookbook author Lebo undertakes an intriguing creative exercise in this wonder-filled book. Lovers of food and nature writing will appreciate Lebo's rangy, researched ode to wildness. * Booklist *
The Book of Difficult Fruit is a bundle of delight, part memoir, part cookbook, all goodness. Reading it, you want Kate Lebo to be your new best friend. Failing that, to send you pie.
-- Judith FlandersKate Lebo has written a thorny and twisty memoir disguised as a compendium of problematic fruits (and grains, and stems, and seeds). She doesn't so much describe as confront her subjects: their poisonous pits, their treacherous thorns, their offensive odors and invasive roots. But her buckets of foraged berries, her tart jams, and her bright and potent cordials live in the real world alongside troubled families, rampant wildfires, and the prickly terror of a newfound tumor. Kate Lebo is the best kind of poet-naturalist: her writing is savage and lyrical and scientific all at once. The Book of Difficult Fruit is feral and fierce -- and I never thought I'd say that about a book on fruit. -- Amy Stewart, author of The Drunken Botanist
'Intriguing and beautiful . . . insightful and funny . . . Science and folklore co-exist comfortably together, with neither looking down on the other. -- Suzanne O'Sullivan, author of It's All In Your Head
With rich, puckery prose, Kate Lebo takes us on an engaging journey into her culinary world and offers surprisingly complex stories of neglected fruits that need a little more coaxing than your average blueberry. Here, too, are uncommon recipes for treats like faceclock coffee, gooseberry cheese, juniper bitters, and thimbleberry kvass. And Lebo even generously includes the osage orange. Its best use—ha! Read it and find out. -- Erik Larson
A gorgeous mixture of food writing, recipes and personal essay which innovates with form in the best way. -- Rebecca Tamás, author of Witch and Strangers
[A] dazzling, thorny new essay collection -- Samin Nosrat * New York Times *
A beautiful, fascinating read full of surprises – a real pleasure. -- Claudia Roden
I loved this sage and sensuous book, and was enraptured by its curious tour through a wunderkammer of plants, history, and personal narrative. Kate Lebo is a warm and erudite guide and her essays are ripe with illumination, enchantment, and a dash of the haunted. -- Melissa Febos, author of Girlhood
Unusual and piquant, this off-kilter collection will hit the spot with readers hungry for something a little different. * Publishers Weekly, starred review *
The one such book that’s held my attention has been The Book of Difficult Fruit, an inventive book that combines memoir, essays and recipes to such a compelling effect that I couldn’t put it down. -- 'Books We Love' * NPR *
Kate Lebo is the author of the cookbook Pie School and the poetry chapbook Seven Prayers to Cathy McMorrisRodgers, and is coeditor with Samuel Ligon of Pie & Whiskey:Writers Under the Influence of Butter and Booze. Her essay about listening through hearing loss, ‘The Loudproof Room’, originally appeared in New England Review and was anthologized in Best American Essays 2015. She lives in Spokane, Washington, where she is an apprentice cheesemaker to Lora Lea Misterly of Quillisascut Farm.
| SKU | Nicht verfügbar |
| ISBN 13 | 9781509879250 |
| ISBN 10 | 1509879250 |
| Titel | The Book of Difficult Fruit |
| Autor | Kate Lebo |
| Buchzustand | Nicht verfügbar |
| Bindungsart | Hardback |
| Verlag | Pan Macmillan |
| Erscheinungsjahr | 2021-04-01 |
| Seitenanzahl | 416 |
| Hinweis auf dem Einband | Die Abbildung des Buches dient nur Illustrationszwecken, die tatsächliche Bindung, das Cover und die Auflage können sich davon unterscheiden. |
| Hinweis | Nicht verfügbar |