I’m a recent
PhD and scholar on Japanese popular visual culture, who also happens to have a
strong interest in food. For several years, I ran the cooking blog The Chocolate Bunny, until I
had my son (adorable, perfect, time-consuming little black hole that he is) and
found myself with no time to test blog-worthy recipes (although I assure you,
we still eat quite well).
Reading at the Table is a project
I’d been mulling for a while: a blog strictly about food literature. Not cookbooks, because I have no room to store enough
cookbooks to keep a blog alive, nor do I have the time to adequately test them. But essays, novels, manifestos, memoirs, comics
– those are books I’ve been buying by the barrowful anyway. Reading at the Table is a space for me
to keep track of these books, and reflect on them.
I don’t
position myself as a critic, because I don’t take myself that seriously, nor do
I consider myself an authority. But I love writing about books and food, and am just looking to pass on information and impressions. I also believe in keeping quiet if you can't say anything nice (unless something is so offensive you can't decently keep quiet). So, as entertaining as scathing reviews are, you won't find any here.
I’m not very
good at keeping up with the very latest publications: I tend to buy books, then
let them linger on my bookshelf (or e-reader) for a few weeks or months. Also,
I became interested in food fairly late in the game. So some of the books
reviewed here are in fact relatively old – which doesn’t mean they aren’t worth
reading or writing about. My goal here is not to stay on top of breaking news, but rather to gradually build a portrait of food literature to this day.
I try to
include a recipe and photos to go along with each review. My policy is to include
full recipes written by others only if I’ve tweaked or modified them in any
way; otherwise, I just give the reference. However, I make exceptions for recipes included in books that are not
cookbooks, such as novels or memoirs. My rationale behind this is that people do not typically
buy these books for the recipes.
Thank you for
visiting!
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