![]() Her French mother, a former ballerina, was a talented cook who wore black eyeliner and high heels every day and kept a well-scrubbed and organized kitchen. Mostly “Blood, Bones and Butter” vibrates with such a relentless creative drive that its moments of resolution bring the reader immense relief. ![]() But there is also delicious prose and there are tender images such as Hamilton holding her nursing child. Instead Hamilton includes jarring details so casually that they rattle like the clatter of kitchen plates crashing to the floor. There is love, of various kinds, peppered with ambiguity, dissonance, and loss. There is a slow realization that food is central to her life, but this comes almost as an afterthought. Hamilton does share family memories centered on food, but these simmer with an underlying fury. Instead Blood, Bones and Butter delivers the story of a life shaped by food with the intensity of a blast of hot air from a 500 degree F. ![]() Gabrielle Hamilton, owner and chef of Prune in New York City, has written a food memoir that defies this kind of cuteness. ![]() Most seem to blend quaintness with family recipes, a passion for flavors and words, and often a love story evoked by the writer’s skill in the kitchen. Food memoirs have become rather predictable. ![]()
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