The Book of Difficult Fruit, Kate Lebo
The Book of Difficult Fruit, Kate Lebo
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The Book of Difficult Fruit
Arguments for the Tart, Tender, and Unruly (with recipes)

Author: Kate Lebo

Narrator: Tanya Eby

Unabridged: 7 hr 50 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 04/06/2021

Includes: Bonus Material Bonus Material Included


Synopsis

A is for Aronia, berry member of the apple family, clothes-stainer, superfruit with reputed healing power. D is for Durian, endowed with a dramatic rind and a shifting odor—peaches, old garlic. M is for Medlar, name-checked by Shakespeare for its crude shape, beloved by gardeners for its flowers. Q is for Quince, which, fresh, gives off the scent of "roses and citrus and rich women's perfume" but if eaten raw is so astringent it wicks the juice from one's mouth.

In this work of unique invention, these and other difficult fruits serve as the central ingredients of twenty-six lyrical essays that range from deeply personal to botanical, from culinary to medical, from humorous to philosophical. The entries are associative, often poetic, taking unexpected turns and giving sideways insights into life, relationships, self-care, modern medicine, and more. What if the primary way you show love is to bake, but your partner suffers from celiac disease? Why leave in the pits for Willa Cather's Plum Jam? How can we rely on bodies as fragile as the fruits that nourish them?

Lebo's unquenchable curiosity leads us to intimate, sensuous, enlightening contemplations. The Book of Difficult Fruit is the very best of food writing: graceful, surprising, and ecstatic.

About Kate Lebo

Kate Lebo is the author of the cookbook Pie School and the poetry chapbook Seven Prayers to Cathy McMorris Rodgers, and coeditor with Samuel Ligon of Pie & Whiskey: Writers Under the Influence of Butter and Booze. Her essay about listening through hearing loss, "The Loudproof Room," originally published in New England Review, was anthologized in Best American Essays 2015. She lives in Spokane, Washington, where she is an apprenticed cheesemaker to Lora Lea Misterly of Quillisascut Farm.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Stewart

Full disclosure: I won a free ARC of this book in a Goodreads giveaway. As the title would suggest, this is a book mostly about different kinds of fruit. There are recipes, both for food and for health and beauty products, as well as scientific facts, autobiography, history, myth and folklore, and p......more

Goodreads review by Olivia

Much like a neglected Italian plum harvest, this book was an absolute mess. It tried to do way too much within the overly rigid, contrived structure of A-Z fruits (including some that are decidedly not fruits at all: wheat, xylitol) and therefore didn't quite do enough? Nevertheless, some interestin......more