Entries tagged as ‘literary’

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: book club choice, fiction, heart-warming, literary, romance

Released October 7, 2008
“Starred Review. Saramago’s philosophical page-turner hinges on death taking a holiday. And, Saramago being Saramago, he turns what could be the stuff of late-night stoner debate into a lucid, playful and politically edgy novel of ideas. For reasons initially unclear, people stop dying in an unnamed country on New Year’s Day. Shortly after death begins her break (death is a woman here), there’s a catastrophic collapse in the funeral industry; disruption in hospitals of the usual rotational process of patients coming in, getting better or dying; and general havoc. There’s much debate and discussion on the link between death, resurrection and the church, and while the clandestine traffic of the terminally ill into bordering countries leads to government collusion with the criminal self-styled maphia, death falls in love with a terminally ill cellist. Saramago adds two satisfying cliffhangers—how far can he go with the concept, and will death succumb to human love? The package is profound, resonant and—bonus—entertaining.” — Publisher’s Weekly
Categories: Adult Fiction
Tagged: fiction, literary, science fiction

Released Sept. 3, 2008
“History is more than facts and figures; it’s something that happens to all of us. That’s the thought that may strike readers of Kent’s luminous first novel, set at the time of the Salem witch trials. In fact, Martha Carrier, Kent’s grandmother back nine generations, was hanged as a witch in 1692. As portrayed here by her daughter, Sarah, Martha is a proud, stubborn, prickly woman, unbending in her beliefs and uninterested in public opinion. When Sarah returns to her family, having been sent away with a little sister because one of her brothers has the plague, she’s not sure she wants to go back to her cold mother and dour, seven-foot father, who has some mysterious connection to Cromwell. But when malicious girls start pointing fingers, neighbor turns against neighbor, and Martha is told she will be arrested for witchcraft, she will not run, and she will not make a false confession. But Martha tells Sarah that when she is interrogated about her mother’s activities, she must lie to save herself. Amidst the painful details of jail and persecution, deep-seated suspicion and familial betrayal, it is this powerful act of love that crowns the book. Highly recommended.” - Library Journal
Categories: Adult Fiction
Tagged: drama, historical fiction, literary

Released: June 24, 2008
“Canin’s new work about class, politics, money, and media in the Nixon era through the present day will resonate powerfully with readers in this presidential election year. Corey Sifter, a working-class boy from a small New York town, is hired by the Metareys, the wealthiest family in Saline, to be a man-of-all-trades. His work ethic endears him to the Metareys, who treat him as one of the family, even paying for his prep school tuition. As both an insider and an outsider, Corey is in a unique position to observe the political maneuverings of Liam Metarey and his campaign to elect Sen. Henry Bonwiller to the presidency. However, Bonwiller’s personal failings ruin not only his political career but also the finances and family life of the Metareys. This saga of politics and family is a superb achievement; Canin (The Palace Thief ) interleaves past and present to create a classical tragedy from the very first page. This engrossing novel would be a good book club selection and is highly recommended.” Library Journal
Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: book club choice, fiction, literary