Dear friends and followers,
My blog and I are taking a vacation until January of 2016. My family and I are going to Tulum, Mexico for vacation next week and the wedding of my nephew, JM. The following weeks, Nov. 3 and Nov. 10, I am having laser surgery on my eyes--an enforced vacation.
The hard part of this, for me, is that I am currently reading some great books that I want to share with everyone. But, they will have to wait.
I will return in January with an updated format and a way to showcase more books. Thanks for your friendship and loyalty.
Until January,
Miriam
Welcome to my blog. I am Miriam Downey, the Cyberlibrarian. I am a retired librarian and a lifelong reader. I read and review books in four major genres: fiction, non-fiction, memoir and spiritual. My goal is to relate what I read to my life experience. I read books culled from reviews in The New York Times, The New York Review of Books, Bookmarks, and The New Yorker. I also accept books from authors and publicists. I am having a great time. Hope you will join me on the journey.
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Sunday, October 18, 2015
Thursday, October 1, 2015
Lunch in Paris
by Elizabeth Bard
Back Bay Books
2010
326 pages Memoir
Lunch in Paris by Elizabeth Bard is subtitled "A Love
Story with Recipes." And that is what it is—a cross cultural love story
with absolutely delicious recipes. I had two strikes against me when I began Lunch
in Paris for our September book group: I had already read Bard's second
memoir, Picnic
in Provence, so I pretty much already knew the story; and I had just
finished the very quirky and delightful, Kitchens
of the Great Midwest, a novel with recipes.
At the same time, I found Lunch in Paris to be
delightful, most especially because of Bard's unique voice. She is a strong,
independent American woman finding her way around Paris culture; a culture much different than she anticipated. Gwendal, the boyfriend, is a delightful
PhD with aspirations to make movies. The reader has extremely warm feelings
toward him; he is adaptable and loving.
Bard is adaptable as well. Although acclimatizing herself to
Paris culture is daunting, she manages quite well. And ahhh the recipes. At book club, our hostess made a heavy yogurt
cake with canned apricots which was delicious. I made a summer ratatouille that
we enjoyed a lot. Then, today, as i was looking over the book one more time, I
found a couple of delightful recipes to use the lamb that my Saudi student
butchered for Eid last week and shared with me.
This is a "nice" read. It isn't heavy, too
romantic, or too Parisian. The women in my book club really enjoyed it. Our
hostess is planning a Paris vacation next summer, and most of us have been to
Paris at least once. We spent a lot of time discussing the challenges of living
in a different culture. But frankly, I enjoyed Picnic in Provence more—not sure why. The reviewer in Kirkus says
the book starts out vanilla, "but the author's charming narrative and
penetrating insights quickly add a subtle complexity that will captivate
readers."
The Kirkus review.
Elizabeth Bard's website.
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