DTDL New Releases

Entries tagged as ‘heart-warming’

The School of Essential Ingredients by Erica Bauermeister

June 19, 2009 · Leave a Comment

ingredients

Released January 2009

I read the blurb on the back of this book as saying “Fans of Laura Esquivel are going to fall in love with Erica Bauermeister’s beautiful story.” After finishing the book, I flipped it back over and re-read the sentence, which actually reads: “Fans of Maeve Binchy and Laura Esquivel are going to fall in love with Erica Bauermeister’s beautiful story.” Ahh. That explains a lot.

I read the blurb on the back of this book as saying “Fans of Laura Esquivel are going to fall in love with Erica Bauermeister’s beautiful story.” After finishing the book, I flipped it back over and re-read the sentence, which actually reads: “Fans of Maeve Binchy and Laura Esquivel are going to fall in love with Erica Bauermeister’s beautiful story.” Ahh. That explains a lot.

This book centers on the power of food and the existence of an incredible, mystical relationship with cooking. There are gorgeous descriptions of ingredients, of sauce-making, of perfect desserts. It’s a big love letter to gastronomy and an appreciation of taste and smell.

It’s also, well, a tad sappy. The characters are extremely sensitive – and each can communicate with others through only the most understanding of glances, or the kindest half-smile. In the same chapters where I scoffed at the sentimentality, I found myself next to tears in just a few pages. Even if I wasn’t crazy about what Bauermeister was doing with her characters, the language she used to make it happen was wonderfully moving.

“The School of Essential Ingredients” is really a place where everything works out, where the people are wholeheartedly good and the eating is divine. My final reaction was, so what if it’s romanticized to within an inch of it’s life? It’s delicious.  – Sara Wedell, Adult Services Librarian

Categories: Adult Fiction
Tagged: , , , ,

Goldengrove by Francine Prose

October 4, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Released Sept. 16, 2008

Amazon Best of the Month, September 2008: Author and essayist Francine Prose’s novel Goldengrove will be a surprise to readers familiar with her famously razor-sharp dialogue and tough-love attitude towards her memorable characters. In this affecting coming-of-age novel, Prose introduces us to Nico, a chubby thirteen-year old girl who imagines nothing more than keeping her parents at arms length and hanging out with her older sister, Margaret and her charismatic boyfriend during the long summer break. Instead, Nico finds herself navigating the perilous course of mourning after her beloved sister drowns in the lake just beyond the family’s home. With little support from her grief-stricken parents, she must come to terms with the tragedy largely on her own. Prose’s ability to situate the adult reader within the heart and mind of young Nico is quite remarkable, and verges on the poetic. Goldengrove is a poignant story that prompts us to retrace those often long-forgotten, but monumental early steps towards acceptance and understanding.  – Amazon.com

Categories: Adult Fiction
Tagged: , ,

The Necklace: Thirteen Women and the Experiment That Transformed Their Lives by Cheryl Jarvis

September 23, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Released Sept. 9, 2008

This is the true story of thirteen women who chipped in for group custody of $37,000 diamond necklace.  By meeting as a group every time “Jewelia” changed hands, the women went from being acquaintances and co-workers to being a group of close friends.   The necklace means something different to each of them and affects each of them individually.  In one case, it rekindles a marriage, in another, connects a lonely woman with much-needed friendship.

The story is as charming as the original idea is unusual, but the end result, that this group of women who come together to share a necklace ultimately come to share their time and energy with the community.  – Sara Wedell, Adult Services Librarian

Categories: Adult Nonfiction
Tagged: , ,

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer

August 4, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Released July 29, 2008

“The letters comprising this small charming novel begin in 1946, when single, 30-something author Juliet Ashton (nom de plume Izzy Bickerstaff) writes to her publisher to say she is tired of covering the sunny side of war and its aftermath. When Guernsey farmer Dawsey Adams finds Juliet’s name in a used book and invites articulate—and not-so-articulate—neighbors to write Juliet with their stories, the book’s epistolary circle widens, putting Juliet back in the path of war stories. The occasionally contrived letters jump from incident to incident—including the formation of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society while Guernsey was under German occupation—and person to person in a manner that feels disjointed. But Juliet’s quips are so clever, the Guernsey inhabitants so enchanting and the small acts of heroism so vivid and moving that one forgives the authors (Shaffer died earlier this year) for not being able to settle on a single person or plot. Juliet finds in the letters not just inspiration for her next work, but also for her life—as will readers.” – Publisher’s Weekly

Categories: Adult Fiction
Tagged: ,