[personal profile] fiefoe

Supposedly this is a novel masquerading as a book of essays masquerading as a cookbook, and so far it is succeeding on all three fronts without coming off as too gimmicky. In the novel, it's been amply and deftly revealed that Tarquin the narrator has issues with his brother and other kin; in the essays, we are being showered with bon mots both borrowed and original, (Swinburne's biographer on an episode involving Roman sewage systems - 'the Muse of history must draw her veil'); and in the cookbook, Tarquin talks about food with knowledge and becoming reverence.

John Lanchester, along with Alain de Botton, seems to belong to a particular British breed: a clever fellow.
  • One early disaster of my brother's, .. was occasioned by the absence of the small word "plucked"- he removed from the oven a roasted but full-fledged pheasant, terrible in its hot sarcophagus of feathers.
  • We are all familiar with the after-the-fact tone - weary, self-justificatory, aggrieved, apologetic- shared by ship captains appearing before boards of inquiry to explain how they came to run their vessels aground, and by authors composing forewords.
  • (Counter to Roland Barthes' take on the meaning of any list of likes and dislikes), to like something is to want to ingest it, and in that sense is to submit to the world... But dislike hardens the perimeter between the self and the world, and brings a clarity to the object isolated in its light. Any dislike is in some measure a triumph of definition, distinction, and discrimination - a triumph of life.
This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

Profile

fiefoe

March 2026

S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4567
8 9 1011121314
15 16 1718192021
22 23 2425262728
293031    

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Mar. 17th, 2026 03:05 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios