Additional Views

Blood, Bones & Butter: The Inadvertent Education of a Reluctant Chef

By Gabrielle Hamilton

List Price: $26.00
Our Price: $12.95
(You Save: $13.05 )

4 out of 5 stars

(1 Reviews)

Write a review

Order Now

Step 1:

Condition Location Is Signed Price Quantity
In Stock
2
6

Step 2:

Step 3:

Get It Later

Product Description

Before Gabrielle Hamilton opened her acclaimed New York City's East Village restaurant Prune, she spent twenty fierce, hard-living years trying to find purpose and meaning in her life. Her writing in BLOOD, BONES & BUTTER traces an unconventional journey through the many ktichens Hamilton has inhabited through the years - from the rural kitchen of her childhood to her own kitchen at Prune, with its many unexpected challenges, and the kitchen of her Italian mother-in-law, who serves as the link between Hamilton's idyllic past and her own future marriage. By turns epic and intimate, this is an unflinching and lyrical debut. 291p.

Editorial Reviews

In this provocative debut, a renowned chef finds her fulfillment as a writer.

Though a passion for food provides Hamilton's theme and focus, her passion for writing distinguishes this memoir from similar behind-the-kitchen volumes. In fact, her accomplishment as the owner and chef of Prune, in New York City, seems less like destiny than the result of a series of detours, from the broken family that left her to support herself with a series of food jobs since her early teens, when petty crime and casual drugs also marked her life, through her on-again/off-again college studies that culminated in an MFA in fiction writing from the University of Michigan. "I was not looking to open a restaurant," she writes of the quixotic leap she made into the profession—despite never having worked as a chef, written a business plan or had any idea of the legal processes involved in converting an abandoned space into a tiny bistro that would quickly come to gross almost $2 million a year. While the centerpiece of the book is an amazing chapter that finds the foundation of Prune—its spirit of hospitality—in her experiences as an impoverished international vagabond, the restaurant provides only one dimension of the narrative's richness. In a manner that is never glib or sentimental, Hamilton proceeds from the childhood innocence of her family's unraveling through the life of a precocious hustler for whom introspection was a luxury through the romantic complications of leaving her longtime female lover for the Italian man she would marry. This union that would provide her with something like the family she had lost decades earlier, but a marriage that would prove both turbulent and unconventional (the couple had two children in their first seven years of marriage without living together).

After initially disdaining a career in food as one devoid of "meaning and purpose," she finds both here.

Copyright Kirkus 2010 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.

Customer Reviews

Average Rating:

4 out of 5

Total Reviews: 1, Write A Review

  • 4 out of 5

    More a story about family, love and independence than food

    Written by TheCulinaryLibrarian, Posted on 08/03/2011 at 1:54:50 PM

    While BBB is mostly associated as being a food memoir, Hamilton's story is more about family, love and independence than food. Food is the backdrop and a lot of the time tied to her decision-making, but overall it is an exploration of her relationship to her family and need to make it on her own when that relationship unravels. Her prose is very well-done and makes the book a quick read. I would recommend it to people, but I would also say its not food writing, its good memoir writing.

You May Also Like These Items

Narrow Results By

Category

Top of Page
-->