My Top Five Food-Themed Books:
1.)
The Thing About
Leftovers by C. C. Payne (that's me!): In the South, we love you
with our food. In this novel, 12-year-old Fizzy Russo does just that—attempting to
love her parents, new stepparents, and new friends with fried chicken, cheese
grits, Kentucky Hot Browns (an open faced sandwich with Texas Toast,
turkey, ham and bacon, covered with Mornay sauce, smothered in cheese,
topped with a slice of tomato and baked until gooey and browning at the edges)
and the like, and to win their love in return—not
to mention The Southern
Living Cook-Off. Fizzy believes that winning the cook-off that will
cause everyone to forgive her and love her more. (I listed my
own book first because if you stop reading here, I hope it's to
go buy my book, and because I can't yet afford to be the kind of author who
humbly never mentions her own work—but I TOTALLY aspire to be
that kind of author, so please buy the book!)
2) Close to Famous
by Joan Bauer: 12-year-old Foster McFee is making the world a sweeter place one
cupcake at a time! She makes some unlikely friends with her fabulous cupcake
creations (I told you food is love!) including a retired, reclusive movie
star, a would-be documentary filmmaker, and the folks down at Angry Wayne's Bar
& Grill who sell her cupcakes for her. I love the way Foster overcomes,
pushing herself, practicing, and persevering . . . in baking and in life.
3) Ramona Quimby, Age
8 by Beverly Cleary: I wouldn't dare make a list without including
this classic, Newbery Honor Book. Most chefs say they can tell a lot about another
chef simply by what he or she does with an egg. And so it is with Ramona
Quimby, who cracks an egg on her head in the school cafeteria. Plus, the food
at her family's favorite restaurant, Whopper Burger, sounds delicious—I'd
definitely like to have my next birthday party there!
4) For a younger
crowd, I recommend Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs by Judi Barrett because .
. . mashed potato snow? Hamburger storms? Pancakes floating down from the sky?
Sign me UP for that! This imaginative picture book, with detailed, delightful
drawings, and great humor, remains a fave in my family—it's
one that you truly never tire of reading aloud.
5) For older readers, I
recommend Eat
Cake by Jeanne Ray, because when the going gets tough, the tough
get baking! Ruth's first step to dealing with any problem is baking a cake—"sweet
potato bundt cake with rum-plumped raisins and spiced sugar glaze" or
"apricot almond pound cake" and the like. And she shares her
recipes—as well as humor, warmth, and wisdom—as
she deals with her teenage daughter, college-student son, out-of-work husband,
live-in mother, estranged father, and financial strain.
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