
Before last week, I had not finished a single book since Little Bean was born.
This is, for me, an utterly astounding sentence. I used to read the way I breathed air: continuously, sometimes quickly, sometimes slow and consciously, always. I used to read while walking down the street, brushing my teeth, and sitting at red lights in the car. I grew so attached to the world within the covers of books that I deliberately slowed down when I loved one, for fear that it would end soon. When I finally finished Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
So, to go almost a year without reading a book all the way through? Goodness, who is this?
Hi, I'm a mama. And a writer.
There are no more languid hours, the way I had when I was a kid, bending my back over the arm of the couch, the book over my head, to catch the dying light in the sky by which I was reading. Now, I have half-open books perched on surfaces around the house. I've been waiting for some time without writing a book to get back to them.
Now that I have done this twice, I know: I can't read books when I'm in the middle of writing one. Words bleed into my sentences, ones I had never considered before. Phrases I read on white paper make it onto my screen before I notice fully, and then I have to erase. Magazine articles, the newspaper cover to cover, essays in books, and an endless array of oddities online? I haven't stopped those. But entire books? Nope.
Not until last week, when I sat down while Little Bean was napping, and read The School of Essential Ingredients
I don't want to tell you too much, because you might want to read it yourself. Just know that the story circles through a cooking school, run by a woman named Lillian who has a calm demeanor, capable hands, and an understanding for people that comes from her past. Stories emerge with each class, from homemade pasta and chocolate cake. Not that much happens, in the Hollywood sense, but everything rumbles under the surface, in the glacial way that human relations actually happen.
And the way that Erica Bauermeister describes food — slow and sensuous, filled with poignancy and a sense of presence — made me lift up my eyes and take them in. And they made me hungry.
I read this book as I slipped under the hot waters of a bath. I picked it up as Little Bean napped, my hands curved around a hot cup of coffee. And I devoured the last pages in the warm lamplight of the living room, on the end of the couch where I fed Little Bean just a few hours before.
I finally read an entire book. This one was such a wonderful warmth and loveliness to begin it all again.
p.s. I believe in sharing, especially because plenty of us cannot afford new hardback books these days. So I'm giving away my copy, now that I have finished it. Leave a comment here, and make sure I have some way of reaching you. The Chef and I will randomly select a number at the end of the week and choose one of you! We'll put the book in the mail, with a little present for you from us.
Hi - sounds great! I hope I'll win!
ReplyDeleteAs a college undergrad in a science major, I haven't finished a book (besides a textbook) in far too long. I started MFK Fisher's The Gastronmical Me a few days ago, and already it feels like a book that I will dread the end of because it's so filled with pleasant, heavy, satisfying words of food. The School of Essential Ingredients sounds like the perfect companion to my Fisher. I would love to read it, and my e-mail is kateswenson88@gmail.com in case I get picked!
ReplyDeleteChecking your blog instead of doing my chem homework...how does this always happen?
Kate
This is the second time I've read an absolutely awed review of this book. Now I feel certain I ought to read it!
ReplyDeleteThe book sounds wonderful!! I hope I win too :)
ReplyDeleteI'm in my last year of university, doing a science degree and applying to grad school, and I feel like the fifteen minutes I snatch every night to read a chapter before I go to sleep is the only thing keeping me sane. I can't devour books the way I do when I'm on holidays, but the little sips each night revive me...
ReplyDeleteP.S. Do you know where you can get a set of the little rubber spacers shown on the Le Creuset in your masthead?
oh! i so identify with the not-able-to-finish-a-book affliction! as a mamma, i wasn't able to read consistently until my little one turned 2. as a student, i read between quarters. so now I put the books down if it doesn't strike my fancy - there are too many good ones out there to waste time on the mediocre...
ReplyDeleteyou may find me at bhelenperryATgmailDOTcom!
I'd love to give it a read. Being in school I'm always looking for a new book to read that doesn't deal with anything that I study. I need some new books for my list to finish.
ReplyDeleteYou can contact me at
carolynann1@gmail.com. In case I'm the lucky chosen one.
Ooh, pick me, pick me! (Sorry, too tired and sinusy to say anything more appropriate.)
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds amazing!
ReplyDeleteAnd so very, very going on my wishlist. Ee! Exciting.
This book sounds like the fictional mate to my Penguin Companion to Food!
ReplyDeletesounds like a very interesting read, would love to.
ReplyDeleteThat is exactly how I felt after finally being able to read again after so long. (2 small boys, enough said!) :)
ReplyDeleteclair(dot)shearar(at)gmail(dot)com
I love books, until I had children, a book was just an extension to my own hand. Now that they are older, much older, I *almost* have as much time to read.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the review. The book sounds lovely.
Another book to add to my already swollen list?
ReplyDeleteFiiiine.
I can be contacted via email at duckyfun@hotmail.com
I recently discovered your website and love all the great information you provide. Since my boyfriend was diagnosed with celiac's a couple of years ago, I try to stock our pantry with as much gluten-free products as possible. One item I'd like to share is KIND Fruit and Nut Bars (www.kindsnacks.com). They are wheat free, gluten free, and dairy free. There are several different flavors and are a great little snack, especially to keep in your purse.
ReplyDeleteAfter reading one of your blogs, I am definitely going to check out Mariposa's Bakery items. Anyway, keep up the good work!
eloise25@gmail.com
I know just what you mean about the shock of no longer having time to inhabit the books. Becoming Mama blows that away, doesn't it? I think for me that lasted until my oldest was six and started reading with his own absorption.
ReplyDeleteLife being what it is, now I am in a (hopefully short) period where I am fighting cancer and actually have long hours at home alone, left wide open for reading. Your book sounds so lovely! If I don't win it I'll look for it at the library.
cloudscome at yahoo dot com
Oh, that sounds wonderful; I do so love the pay it forward message and if I won would be sure to try and do so after I devoured it.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your heart, talents, and passion for helping others (and wonderful recipes of course!)...with each one of us. After becoming a 'gluten free girl', my life is so much better! You are a blessing. :)
ReplyDeleteShauna, how could anyone not want to read that book after reading this post?! Count me in.
ReplyDeleteI can completely relate to dreading a book's conclusion, slowing down when you're nearing the end to try to delay the inevitable. There are several I've done that with, but one that I truly fretted over, deliberately putting the book down and walking away for a bit, was the last Harry Potter book. Silly, perhaps, but knowing that after I finished it, I'd never have that excited anxiousness of beginning a new HP adventure...oh, so poignant!
mailfordanika @ gmail dot com
This sounds wonderful! I too have been in a reading lull. I'm looking forward to checking this one out!
ReplyDeleteI'd love to read it.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a good book! I know what you mean about not reading much after having a child. By the time you can find a chance to put your feet up and rest, reading almost sounds like too much work!
ReplyDeletethat sounds like a wonderful book!
ReplyDeletehave you read "serve the people" by jen lin-liu yet? i'm in the middle of it and it's really good, if you haven't read it yet, i recommend it. it'll make you crave chinese food something terrible!
i would love to win your copy of this book! i can be reached at babyjenks9ATgmailDOTcom.
thanks for sharing your thoughts shauna!
~ sabe
Wow, only 3 comments so far! I love books and would certainly love this one.
ReplyDeleteI read this and your glutenfreegirl blog, and just want to thank you for both. Your words and pictures are inspiring. And I really wouldn't expect you to post a hardback book to the UK, but I wanted to say thank you for all your work anyway! With the book-writing and the baby, I don't know how you fit everything into your day!
ReplyDeleteAnd I'm supposed to be cataloguing law books right now. You're very distracting. Hmm.
sounds like a good book, thanks for the rec.
ReplyDeleteHello!
ReplyDeleteI know the feeling! I am also a college student. It's my last semester and until this past Christmas I hadn't had the chance to read a book for fun in almost 2 years. Fortunately, I found your book at the library and I couldn't put it down. I felt so satisfied when I reached the last page. From your review I imagine this book will have a similar effect. It is so kind of you to pass it along. My e-mail is christinestansell@yahoo.com, just in case I get lucky! Thanks so much!
I completely agree - depending on what I'm reading at the time, my vocabulary changes. Luckily, it meant that I had a huge vocab growing up, but I can see how it could get in the way of writing. Kudos for getting the time to read a book again - it sounds fabulous!
ReplyDeleteSeems like I haven't read a complete book in 6 or more months. My days were filled with researching/shopping for/preparing GF food. And then there was the election and the economic news that I just "had" to keep up with! The School of Essential Ingredients sounds like a wonderful remedy. :-)
ReplyDeleteI understand. When I was in law school, I was completely overwhelmed by the volume of dry required reading each night. It was dense, and it made reading for pleasure a thing of the past for years to come. I've just finally rediscovered my rhythm with books, and can't get enough again. Just like when I was a kid. I'd love to read this. I love passing along books.
ReplyDeleteelizabeth (dot) ann (dot) wilson (at) gmail (dot) com
I'm otherwise known as 'The Devourer of Books'. I read constantly...backstage, waiting for my cue, in the bath, curled up on the couch...life is not complete without books.
ReplyDeletecmnouja@aol.com-we're also friends on Facebook, Catherine Nou****
How nice of you. Putting my name in the hat. Thanks, Shauna.
ReplyDeleteI can't say I've been much of a fan of food books but I loved yours and this one sounds wonderful!
ReplyDeleteI'm on the wait list at my library. How generous to give away a book you loved so much; I have a hard time parting with those!
ReplyDelete(Hope this doesn't come through twice - PC weirdness today!)
ReplyDeleteI've never been much of a fan of food-related books but I loved yours and this one sounds fabulous.
Have you read Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver. I like it so much I am considering purchasing a copy instead of waiting for the library's copy to be returned.
ReplyDeleteI remember the first year of my littles lives. I was amazed if I finished anything besides dinner. Then as they get older mom gets more time but they get more independant.
Hi Shauna,
ReplyDeleteAs always, your writing delights me. This is most definitely the next book I'll be reading.
Take care,
Kylie
I found your blog because my husband has Celiacs so naturally I subscribed. I'm also a "reader" claiming it as one of my passions. I don't get to read much during the school year but during summers and vacation weeks I revert to my old self. :-)
ReplyDeleteMight I suggest audio books to you for those times when you can multi-task? I borrow the CD version from my library and rip them so I can listen on my ipod at the gym, walking outside, working around the house, etc. In fact, sometimes the reader has such a captivating voice that it grips me tightly.
I too, have that melancholy feeling when finishing a good, long book. I recently finished Pillars of the Earth and felt exactly the same way.
sounds wonderful!
ReplyDeleteOoh, I wish they had it at the library; I'd check it out right now! Thanks for the review, it sounds fantastic.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great book - I'm always looking for new things to read so I hope I win! :) My contact info is eciravolo at gmail dot com.
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds great! Even if I don't win, I'll be checking it out for sure.
ReplyDeleteallisonthemeep@gmail.com
I'm glad you got to read again. Books are the best thing in the world.
ReplyDeleteblneifert@roanoke.edu
I'd love to read this book!!
ReplyDeleteHi! My son, Luke will be 7 months old next weekend and I think I might be ready to kick back into my reading habit. I've only been reading the New Yorker and news (and of course, my blogs). Thanks for the recommendation and thanks for the chance to win! Heidi, from Boston who loves your blog.
ReplyDeleteI'm so happy you finished writing your book and are back to posting on your blog. I've been reading it for a couple months off and on and have throughly enjoyed it. I just figured out that I'm allergic to gluten---sorta self diagnosed myself---I'm away from home and it made it easier to test myself then to wait till Christmas break when I travelled back home from Austria. Anywho, I have been extremely encouraged from reading your blog---for I too have not had the time, or rather made the time to sit and read a book all the way through *(I think I have 5 started?). By the way, I'll be in Seattle in late August or September and I can't wait to go to some of the places that you've written about :) I think I'll be bringing a suitcase for food---haha.
ReplyDeleteWell, I'm gonna go grab myself something to eat and read up on the rest of the posts I've missed since I've been up in the mountains cooking for 150+ pastors :)
kell.e.cook@gmail.com
Even if I don't win the book, you have tempted me. I know what you mean about finishing books. The last one I finished was Alice Waters and it took a long plane ride for me to have the still time. So glad I did. You can easily find me at www.spinachtiger.com
ReplyDeleteI am an avid fan of yours although not gluten sensitive. I still try to cut the wheat several days a week.
this sounds delicious!
ReplyDeletecara at herbandcara . com
I've been asking around for years for books to help me enjoy being a cook. I adore parenting and read about it. I adore birth and read about it. It makes sense that to adore cooking, reading about it would help. This book sounds perfect.
ReplyDeleteOn the flip side, going gluten free has forced me to slow my life and spend more time in the kitchen. Interestingly enough...I'm enjoying cooking. Thanks for all your great receipes and thoughts.
We just taste tested your pie recipe against Rebecca Riley's. They were both good. Yours won, hands down. One essential recipe down. Not too many more to go.
Ann (hsmama@comcast.net)
When I first met my husband, I asked him what types of books he liked to read.
ReplyDelete"I don't read except for text books."
It was as if he sprouted two heads! Unbelievable. He was new to Canada.... maybe the language was a barrier? There were serious doubts about whether or not this could be a long term relationship.
Thankfully love opened new aspects of the world. He became enamored with books and I graduated from Cheeze Whiz.
Your blog and book have helped this newly diagnosed celiac family tremendously. My daughter loves, just loves, her new gluten free life.
The parents of a former student gave me Middlesex at the end of the school year as thanks for being an inspiration for their daughter. I loved it, too... haunting and beautiful.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this review. If I don't win, I'm off to the library or the used book store.
I enjoy your blog and all your ideas/recommendations for pushing ouselves out more into trying new things and then trying to cook them!
ReplyDeleteHave seen several good reviews of this book and would love to read it. As a librarian, I applaud your sharing your copy. It's so fun to read a copy of a book "loved" by someone else.
Nancy
jnbcoupons@gmail.com
I love to read a book that makes me feel like I am reluctantly leaving the home of a good friend after a period of intense bonding.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing!
I'd love a chance to win the book. Reading about cooking is definitely the ultimate hobby beating out reading and cooking, each done separately.
ReplyDeleteI love your description of the book and can't wait to read it! TullyLewis@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteSo generous of you to share your book -- I'd love to be in the running. Thank you! jackie@plyandburl.com
ReplyDeleteOh, what a lovely idea! Thanks for the offer.
ReplyDeleteI've also heard good things about this book. It sounds wonderful.
ReplyDeleteI can really relate to the "not finishing a book when I used to eat them for lunch" cycle now that I'm a mom too and a working mom. I would be honored to own a book loved by a fellow reader. If I'm lucky enough my cell number is 352-283-1783. Guess in this crazy internet world it might be safer to give you that info and share my address another way. IF I win!
ReplyDeleteGreat idea, by the way!
Just found your blog, looking for gluten-free recipes/communities. I second the undergrad up there - I don't have time for pleasure reading anymore, now that I am in my junior year. However, this book sounds very interesting. In case I win, I can be reached at pirateremix@hotmail.com
ReplyDeleteThe book sounds wonderful! Glad to hear you've finished a book once again!!
ReplyDeleteRebecca
zekeandrebecca@bellsouth.net
Sounds like a lovely book. I am currently reading three books at once. There is something so wonderful about being inside a story that I can never keep myself involved in just one story at a time.
ReplyDeletemy email is: rachel.sircy@gmail.com
I know what you mean about reading being a treat!! I remember the carefree days I used to spend with my nose in a book . . . *sigh* My kids are at least old enough now when I can declare it quiet reading time and MAYBE have them cooperate. But not usually!
ReplyDeleteThe School of Essential Ingredients sounds amazing. I love books like that, when they deliciously unfold and draw you in without you even being aware! Thanks for the chance, Shauna!
I've been hearing/reading so much about this book -- dying to read it!! Thanks for the chance to win! :)
ReplyDeleteI'd love to read this. Isn't it just the best feeling when the words of an author truly move and tantalize you. I'm always taking lessons from books I love and trying to subtly weave them into my own writing. Your style is so lovely, Shauna, and always a pleasure to read.
ReplyDeleteHi there! I'm excited to check this out, though i couldn't be more of a mess in the kitchen. But it's all about little moments of bravery, right? I'm positive that my celiac diagnosis was a shout in the face, "you can do more than you think!" thanks for all of the support!
ReplyDeleteGood morning!
ReplyDeleteAlthough I don't have a little one, I have not finished a book in a while, life has been busy. I would love to win this one and read it cover to cover!
(sa2asl@yahoo.com)
Thank you!
I LOVE Jeffery Eugenides. I smiled when I read your reaction to finishing Middlesex. I took three days to finish the last twenty pages of that book.
ReplyDeleteI have been following your blog ever since i was diagnosed as having a wheat allergy. Your blog about gluten definitely has helped me out.
ReplyDeleteI would love to read this book!
thanks!
Book reivews like this keep popping up.... maybe I should take the hint? ~fingers crossed
ReplyDeletemlangley@acgi.com
This book looks awesome!
ReplyDeleteShauna and Chef,
ReplyDeleteI've heard great things about this book. I'm a late thirty-something mom... 3 kids (2 are Celiac) and they inspired me to go back to school. Culinary school - to be exact. My friends all say this book is right up my alley. I just haven't had the time to go out and purchase it yet! I can't wait to read it!!!
This sounds fabulous - just the kind of thing to read when my wee one nods off ... thank you for the recommendation and the give-away!
ReplyDeleteloraxknits@gmail.com
I've been reading for a while, but never commented.
ReplyDeleteThanks for feeding us in more ways than one. I've tried and enjoyed several of your wonderful recipes (new fav - the oatmeal pancakes), and I am always looking for a good book recommendation.
Thanks! emorgan05@gmail.com
What a lovely little give-away. Looks like a wonderful book!
ReplyDeleteI can't get enough food and cooking related books lately so I would love to devour this one and add it to my collection.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Books that tell stories through food are one of my favorite escapes because it is so easy to lose your self in something so familiar and universal. The book I've been reading (The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell) has been so emotionally trying and so amazing, it would be nice to move on to something a bit more comforting.
ReplyDelete--Emily (lehottomato@gmail.com)
Thanks so much for the book review, this is the second I've recently read. Your review makes me crave the words between the pages.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a lovely read! Thanks for the recommendation - and for promoting the idea of passing books along to others. What a lovely thing to do.
ReplyDeleteShould I be the lucky winner, you can reach me through my blog. Just click my name here.
I would love to win this! Your site and book are inspiring me to cook well for myself with my new Celiac diagnosis, and I'm sure this book would help, too.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations for finishing your first book this year and thank you for having such a generous spirit to pass it on.
I'm 45weeks into living gluten free, and I found your blog on the first day. That day, I think I went through most of the pages you'd posted. I love reading about your love of food, and that you have not allowed the lifestyle change to affect it. Your blog consistently gives me hope.
ReplyDeletemsmishka [at] gmail [dot] com
Wow, sounds like a wonderful book! Thanks for the suggestion ...from another busy mama/librarian ...
ReplyDeletesusanfrederickmiller@gmail.com
I would LOVE to read this book. I have learned so much about food from you and your blog. I am so thankful that I am gluten-free and that I am able to make wiser choices about our meat and even our cleaning products. For a while I think I was like the Remy's brother, Emile in Ratatouille and now I am constantly learning. Thank you (you and the Chef)for blessing me with your knowledge.
ReplyDeleteI, too, was a voracious book reader as a child, lugging home armfuls of books from the library which probably weighed more than I did! I have fond memories of hiding out, curled up in a chair in Mom's bedroom, reading, and finding myself in new and wonderful worlds. This habit has carried over into my adult life. My husband once said, "You read all the time" like it was a bad thing. I told him, "You married an English major - what did you expect?" I hold a BA in English from UMass/Dartmouth, concentrating in writing and journalism. Funny I now work at the Providence Journal as a Prepublishing Specialist, not as a writer. (That is, if I survive the next round of layoffs. It is not a good time to be working at a newspaper.) Anyway, I'd digress…I'd love to check out this "The School of Essential Ingredients." Thanks for listening…Karen
ReplyDeletekingraham321@cox.net
Yay, sounds like a great book! Glad you have the time and mental space to read again. Thanks Shauna.
ReplyDeleteilovesoil@gmail.com
This book sounds fantastic. Would love to give it a read!
ReplyDeleteelizabeth(dot)whiteside(at)gmail(dot)com
How lovely of you! And how green. I have 2 kids - boys - 4 and 2. And just a few months ago I finally started reading, really reading, again. I even joined a book club. It's a club of moms so we only meet every 2 months, but we are all so excited to meet and eat and drink wine and discuss books without kids pulling on us, it works.
ReplyDeleteI hope you pick me!
Dale
My daughter brought your book to me in the hospital last May after I had colon surgery. (All is well now,thankfully. I am so very lucky). She had learned she is gluten intolerant several months earlier (after a long struggle) and your blog became a light at the end of a tunnel for her. She has done a wonderful job of regaining her health. We both love your writing. Keep up the good work and I am so glad you have found time for yourself to read. I am newly retired, so have rediscovered the world of books myself!!
ReplyDeletewould love to win this book...new to gluten free and struggling a bit. this one looks inspiring (and educational!)
ReplyDeletemelissa (msl858@mail.harvard.edu)
Ooooo, pick me! Pick me! Being a Lit major, reading just might possibly be my favorite thing to do ever. I'm at bekah.hurst@gmail.com.
ReplyDeletePS. I'm sure you've heard this a gazillion times, but your blog has been really helpful to me this past year. Thanks for all the great recipes and tips!
Hi! I discovered your blog a few weeks ago and fell in love with it. I figured this was as good a time as any to leave a comment.
ReplyDeleteI love the way you write. I have relatives who are gluten-intolerant and I am lactose-intolerant myself, so I know what it's like to have dietary restrictions and still come up with great meals. And I've just started my own blog!
That book you mention looks great, so even if I don't win I intend to read it.
Thanks for the great blog! :)
amelieschoice (at) gmail (dot) com
Definitely interested. Thanks for the giveaway!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a lovely book... I, too, slow down when reading to make a really good book last longer.
ReplyDeleteSorry...forgot to leave a way to contact me...(Teresa from cancer/writing entry)
ReplyDeletewaterhythms@mac.com
Ah... I've been having the same problem since I started grad school -- haven't finished anything other than textbooks since. Sad. But this looks wonderful and might be incentive to make time for leisurely reading again. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteOh a good read is ALWAYS welcome. Even if I don't win, I'll have to try and pick up a copy ... maybe the library has it!
ReplyDeleteThis looks like an interesting book. Also, my favorite book is Middlesex. I've read it 5 times already!
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful idea, so very like you! :-) Can you put my name in the bran tub please?!
ReplyDeleterachel11051975@yahoo.co.uk
I've recently caught up with my reading list now that my twins are almost 2 and a half - way after you managed to do this. ;)
ReplyDeleteI'd love to read this as well.
Deb
sevir at rocketmail dot com
Sounds like a lovely book - especially since it is snowing here. Nothing better than to curl up on the couch under a blanket and ready while it quietly snows outside.
ReplyDeleteWould love to read this ... must check the library!
ReplyDeleteI would love to read this book - it sounds wonderful!
ReplyDeleteBeing a fellow book worm, I just can't imagine my life without books, so I enjoyed this post.
Love your writing!
I love books like that. Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver was like that for me.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tip! After the prize is awarded I'll have to get myself a copy! I really enjoyed your book. Thanks for sharing your experience!
ReplyDeleteHi! I'm a mama and a reader! I saw this book recently and was intrigued - almost picked it up, then decided not to spend the $. I'm right in the middle of "The Sharper Your Knife, the Less You Cry" by Kathleen Finn. I'd love to follow it up with this book. Hope you choose me! Thanks for doing this.
ReplyDeleteOh Shauna. The way you describe your feelings about "The School of Essential Ingredients" is almost identical to how I felt reading your book. If she writes like you do, like we are sitting together and you are telling me the story, then I can't wait to read it. Many blessings to you and your beautiful family. Sincerely, Sheri
ReplyDeletesheri@backyardbluegrass.com
Sounds like a wonderful book!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing!
kateherself at gmail dot com.
As soon as I saw your review I went immediately to my library page to place a hold. I only have 70 something people in front of me haha. I've been looking for a good book for a long time. Thanks for the recommendation as well as the give-away!
ReplyDeleteI just checked our local library's website and they have one copy on the shelf! We are heading out now to get it...
ReplyDeleteLove reading. Glad you finally found your place again! It's hard, I know. Funny how they sleep almost as much as a cat but the time doesn't seem to last very long. Be prepared to lose more hours soon. But great hours they are!
ReplyDeleteRochelle Norman
rochelle@adwicks.com
Sounds like a fantastic book.
ReplyDeleteI was that kid who couldn't keep her nose out of a book. I'd read in the car until I couldn't see the words on the pages anymore (my parents wouldn't drive with the inside lights on), I would walk around the house reading until the very last second before I HAD to put it down, when I got into the shower or ran out to catch the bus to school. Now, I can't fall asleep until I've read a bit. I wish I had more time to read. (I also loved Middlesex, recommended to me by my 16 year old sister, who's also a bookworm).
ReplyDeleteOh, I can't resist a contest like this one! Thank you for the delicious recommendation. I'll put this book on my list of items to find at the library...or at the bookstore if I just can't wait to read it myself!
ReplyDeleteRose-Anne at lifeloveandfood@gmail.com
sounds like a great read. fingers crossed!
ReplyDeleteI'm a mama and a writer who just finished her first book, and the baby has just now gotten into a nap schedule that allows me to read. Good gravy, I've missed it!
ReplyDeleteI would love the chance to read this and pass it on.
ReplyDeleteThanks,
Michelle
This is wild: I just posted this to my "Want to Read" list on facebook... yesterday!!
ReplyDeleteI loved Middlesex too. Two others I loved for the experience of reading them as much as for the books themselves: The Time Traveler's Wife and The Book of Negroes (which I believe is published as "Someone Knows my Name" in the States). Happy reading!
andrea (dot) j (at) shaw (dot) ca
I haven't been able to finish books either lately. And you know why. Not a baby, but a 22 and 24 year old. They never stop needing attention, I guess. Put me in the lottery, too. I need something beautiful and distracting in a good way...
ReplyDeleteI also loved Middlesex!
ReplyDeleteThe book sounds delicious, something to look forward to.
Wow, that's so generous of you.
ReplyDeleteI'm happy that you were able to finish a book, and such a great one at that! I am yet to experience the unique nature of limited time when a parent. Although studying definitely gets in the way of my reading for pleasure time.
Oh Pick me...Pick me Shauna! hhaa It's Aimee from www.Glutenfreebowlofsoul.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteCheers - fun idea.
When going GF for my ds I realized that I also am intolerant of gluten. Would love this book!
ReplyDeleteMaria
I haven't finished a book in 4 years since my daughter was born. I would love to devour this one.
ReplyDeleteThanks,
Nicole
Sounds intriguing. Please add me into the raffle.
ReplyDeleteKelley
plishka@neo.rr.com
Sounds intriguing. Please add me into the raffle.
ReplyDeleteKelley
plishka@neo.rr.com
I am so thrilled to hear that someone shares my desire to gift hardcover books! Although I have my few guilty pleasures (and by few, I may actually mean a cool fifty or so) I absolutely encourage 'paying it forward'- book style.
ReplyDeleteHowever, I could have sworn Tea&Cookies has also made mention of this same novel? Great minds do think alike.... or should I say share?
-Taryn
lindtary@hotmail.com
This looks wonderful! My daughter is nearly 3, and I've only recently had the stamina for books... it's such a lovely thing, to get immersed in a book and only occasionally come up for air. I hope your Little Bean and my girl come to know that pleasure as well. ;)
ReplyDeletemichaelamc@gmail.com
I want to win the book too! If won, I promise I'll pass it along when finished (maybe).
ReplyDeletescarlettjjyeah@yahoo.com
Firstly, I would like to ask, "Did you throw this particular book at the wall?" I like to have books in good condition...
ReplyDeleteSecondly, thanks for your openness, honesty and genuine desire to help others. I've laughed and cried through your "gluten-free girl" book and benefited (greatly!) from your recipes - both of you!
I've been the proverbial "fly on the wall" reading and learning from your blog. [Since I'm typing this, the fly has a voice!] You two have definitely made a difference and contributed to the enjoyment of food again! ...and I LOVE food!
Isn't it strange how things can change so quickly? I used to read a few books a week and now, I've read 1 start to finish since the beginning of the year.
ReplyDeleteThis one looks like one I would dive into and come up a day later finished.
Reading the Publishers Weekly review at Amazon, I can see why Shauna likes it so much. I'm 12 pages from the end of "Gluten-Free Girl" and have greatly enjoyed reading her mouthwatering descriptions of the favorite foods in her life. Sounds like "Essential Ingredients" will yield even more delicious delights.
ReplyDeletepat_booklover@yahoo.com
That sounds exactly like the thing I need to read right now, as the gloom of February presses on.
ReplyDeleteOf course I'd love to read your book, I'd be sure to pass it on to someone else in light of your generosity!
ReplyDeleteI missed literature SOOO much when I had a baby - I found that books on tape (or on ipod nowadays) could be listened to while multitasking and it took a long time but I made it through two Tolstoys very happily
ReplyDeletewhen I finally got lit back my sleep and dreams improved so much - it was very odd but it reminded me how literature is as essential as food for some of us
Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeletetalktoerin(at)gmail(dot)com
I had the same experience after finishing a dissertation--couldn't pick up a book for about a year! This sounds like a great one. And what a lovely idea to give it away! Would love to win it, thanks!
ReplyDeleteRicki at dietdessertdogs@gmail.com
Sounds Splendid!
ReplyDeleteI love me some books about food! I would rather read about food than anything else!
ReplyDeleteRight now I'm reading "The Story of Sushi", and in the last few months I've read "The Secret Life of Lobsters", and "The Omnivore's dilemna".
Luckily my boyfriend and I like a lot of the same books so we can share... but those hardbacks can be pretty spendy!
Thanks for offering to share your copy!
Missy
missydarlin at hotmail dot com
Sounds like a lovely read. Oooh, pick me, pick me!
ReplyDeletecooking and food are becoming quite a passion of mine since losing almost 40 pounds four years ago. i enjoy reading your blog each week and love the recommencation. the book sounds wonderful and i look forward to diving into it.
ReplyDeleteheartsdesire@earthlink.net
I know exactly what you mean. Only recently (my youngest is 3) have I approached anything even remotely like the pace at which I used to devour books.
ReplyDeleteThis one sounds like a keeper!
monsteratemy AT gmail.com
Hey Shauna-
ReplyDeleteI commented earlier this morning, but it seems to have disappeared into the ethers. Par for the course, I guess.
Please throw me into the lottery. If I ever finish one of the current books I'm reading- Michael Chabon's new one, which takes place in Sitka... or Neil Gaiman's "The Graveyard"- the Newbery winner... I'll send one your way.
Wow! What a great review. Count me in! ;-)
ReplyDeleteI'm parenting two crazeeeeee teenagers and have been infected with some kind of puberty related ADD - I am currently in the middle of no less than 5 books (mostly because I keep losing the one I'm working on and starting another), but I'd love to add this one to the list. :)
ReplyDeleteHi Shauna-
ReplyDeleteJust wanted to say that your blog is wonderful and I took you up on a few of your other reccommendations....hello gluten free chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream! :) Thanks for all your good work.
Contact me at diehardfoodie(at)gmail(dot)com
Oh I would love to curl over the arm of my couch with a good book.
ReplyDeleteThe book sounds great! I love books like this. I just finished Gluten-Free Girl and am so glad to have been introduced to your site. :) Thanks for all the great tidbits, recipes, and thoughts and for making being gluten-free so do-able and fun!
ReplyDeletejulie.kora@gmail.com
The book sounds great! I love books like this. I just finished Gluten-Free Girl and am so glad to have been introduced to your site. :) Thanks for all the great tidbits, recipes, and thoughts and for making being gluten-free so do-able and fun!
ReplyDeletejulie.kora@gmail.com
This book sounds wonderful! It would help us out a lot.
ReplyDeletealtona (at) ymail.com
Currently I'm studying for the bar exam. My main study place is at the public library. My room thankfully is an aisle away from the cookbook section (secret. . . YEAH) I am sooooo looking forward to being done with this test I have started a book list and I have already started buying and trading . . . so I am really happy to have a chance at free copy of a great book.
ReplyDeletecadoll74@hotmail.com
What a fantastic phrase. I've never heard the word 'glacial' used to describe human relationships, but now I can't imagine why!! Perfect word. A+ for you!
ReplyDeletePick me for the free book!!
Erin ee.spenner@gmail.com
As a newfound GF eater, I am beginning to slowly understand the blessing with which I have been provided. In addition to returning to Europe last summer (the first week I started GF), I realize the joy and beauty in the simple ideas of food. My book club would love this book. Food and babies are the main constant at our discussions.
ReplyDeleteI'll check back for the results--
I have a book I'd really like to send to you too...one I think the three of you will enjoy for years to come. It was given to me as a teenager; one of those tattered books you have read, underlined and marked up and down.
ReplyDeleteI'll send you mine if you send me yours. :)
Good vibes and loving wishes to you and your lovely family.
-Brj
brennajensen@gmail.com
This is the second recommendation I've seen for the book - it is definitely going on my list for our bookclub! Can't wait to check it out.
ReplyDeleteslhuovinen@yahoo.com
Thanks for your posts. I dont comment often, but love reading about all of your happenings! danikadukes@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteI, too, loved Middlesex! I bet I'll love this book since you highly recommend it :-)
ReplyDeleteoh what a wonderful thing to read again! I have just started to read again after becoming a mommy as well - this book sounds right up my alley. even if i don't win, i hope my library carries it so that i may read it.
ReplyDeletethanks for you.
robin DOT avila88 AT gmail DOT com
I've been dying to read this book!! And as someone who is planning to get pregnant soon, I am trying to slow down and enjoy the lazy, self-indulgence of reading a book uninterrupted while I still can....
ReplyDeleteI'm an English major and haven't finished an entire book in at least a year! Gasp. 2 kids and lots of writing have zapped reading things in their entirety I guess. This book sounds awesome. Thanks for sharing the book and for all of your wonderful recipes, ideas and info. Cheers!
ReplyDeleteJeanine (jeaninertl at yahoo dot com)
I don't have children yet, so I still read constantly! I would love the chance at this book, sounds amazing.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the opportunity.
Leilani
one18fifteen (at) aol (dot) com
I would love to read this book, and there is no way I can buy a hardcover book these days. So I hope you'll randomly choose me. It would brighten my day! Thanks.
ReplyDeletei heard the author on the radio--it sounds great. flickchick at gmail dot com
ReplyDeleteI love reading books about foods - and treat cookbooks like novels a lot of the time!
ReplyDeletenjskog AT knology DOT net
I would love to have a copy of this book! Thanks for the opportunity!
ReplyDeleteReading your daily snippets of wisdom have me summoning the gumption to return to the kitchen and bake again....am a former pastry chef>>>four years out diagnosed with celiac...you are a pearl!!!
ReplyDeletetdonlick@comcast.net
10 Black Rock Rd.
Chadds Ford,PA 19317
I'm a new mom and maybe this ill be my first book to finish too! Please send it along to me ... beccaroni77 @ hotmail dot com
ReplyDeleteGoing through my masters to become a librarian I read far too little for pleasure... and I remember those years now that I've graduated, so I read as much and as often as I can.
ReplyDeleteLately food has been my favourite subject matter. I would love to read the author who makes such an amazing food writer as yourself tear up.
becca_cleaver (at) yahoo (dot)ca
ohhhhh it sounds wonderful....and even if I don't win I shall buy it for myself (along with your new book when it comes out!) Good luck with writing....
ReplyDeleteRoz xx
(r.j.white2@ncl.ac.uk)
I got a review copy of this book from the publisher and reviewed it over on my blog a while back. I couldn't agree with you more. It is such a special and lovely book. It is rare that I read the books sent to me for review and absolutely fall in love, but this one- I can say without doubt that it is a most special book, and worthy of every line of praise that I gave to it.
ReplyDelete(And I'm passing along my copy, too. Must be something about this book that makes us want to absorb it and then pass it along!)
I got a review copy of this book from the publisher and reviewed it over on my blog a while back. I couldn't agree with you more. It is such a special and lovely book. It is rare that I read the books sent to me for review and absolutely fall in love, but this one- I can say without doubt that it is a most special book, and worthy of every line of praise that I gave to it.
ReplyDelete(And I'm passing along my copy, too. Must be something about this book that makes us want to absorb it and then pass it along!)
I have two kids, the oldest is nearly 8. If you can make me read a book I'd be so grateful.
ReplyDeletethanks,
Amy
amy at amyshelf dot com
I can't image life without books. My brother got me one of the ebook reader for my birthday, but I don't like it. I want a book in my hands when I read. I was also afraid I would drop the ebook reader in the bath tub, since that's where I read most of the time. Thanks for your wonderful blog and everyone keep reading.
ReplyDeletekathy b aka willalady@comcast.net
I can't image life without books. I got an ebook reader for my birthday but I don't like it. I want a book in my hands to read. take care and keep reading.
ReplyDeleteCome and live with me, lovely book, and I shall read you cover to cover as well, in the bath, on the sunny porch, while I stir my soup, when I laze under my ducky comforters!
ReplyDeletepogofig at gmail dot com
I hardly ever read books any more (too much time on the computer!!) I need a good one!
ReplyDeleteemail is same as my username here + .com
The summer after kindergarten, I read 313 books and won the local library's summer reading program contest. I received a shiny blue plaque with my name engraved on it.
ReplyDeleteThings have changed just a little in the 18 years since. I read medical journals and textbooks, not novels or biographies. I want to go back! Maybe I'll consider your recommendation of this book the impetus to get back to my pleasure reading roots. Thanks!
i work in a library and still don't have as much time as i would like to read books! this one sounds amazing ;)
ReplyDeleteOh, that's so nice of you to give away your copy! It sounds really neat.
ReplyDeleteOooo I love reading so much. Just as much as I love cooking, and eating and entertaining people. You know how some days you just realize that life truly is a beautiful gift? Today is that day for me. I am blessed and love that you share your blessings with the world via your blog.
ReplyDeleteI also loved Middlesex! I'm so glad you are back to blogging again. You continue to inspire me with your stories and recipes.
ReplyDeleteba1438@aol.com
Barbara
It took me a while to read a book after our son was born, too, but even in short sessions books are such a joy. I can't see myself doing ebooks either, but I really have been enjoying audiobooks lately. The 15-minute ride to and from work or the 30-minute ride to and from "town" becomes such a joy when I am listening to a good audiobook. Any book just takes you away for a bit. I've even listened to books that I've read before like Eat Pray Love by Elizabeth Gilbert. That one is worthy of both and you'll get completely different insights from each. Lately, I am on a Julia Glass audiobook phase. I really like a book that is lengthy. Like you, I don't want them to end too soon. (The Pillars of the Earth easily met that criteria!) Anyway, this book looks (a good cover says so much!) and sounds wonderful.
ReplyDeletethanks,
Shirley
Sounds like a lovely book - and what a great idea to give it away! Books, like food, are best when shared with others. :)
ReplyDeleteAdrienne
(amdawson at austin dot rr dot com)
Eating and reading my two favorite things, so...eating and reading combined? Too much.
ReplyDeleteAh! Sharing books! I would love to have a book club where at the beginning everyone chose a different book and we all passed them in a big circle every few weeks/month until we had read them all. Then everyone would have read 12 or so books for very little at all.
ReplyDeleteI would love to start with this one!
Sounds delicious, I would love a good read that might inspire me to feel passionate about food again. Feeding a family of five (the youngest 17 months)gluten free, I haven't had time to feel inspired in the kitchen in quite sometime. My tastebuds are bored to tears!!!
ReplyDeleteHumblemumblings@gmail.com
(It is also my birthday this week:)
And the way that Erica Bauermeister describes food — slow and sensuous, filled with poignancy and a sense of presence...
ReplyDeleteSounds like the way Shauna Ahern describes food too!
Pick me, Mr. Random Number Generator.
Please.
The good news is that someday, in the future, while you are waiting at lessons, waiting in the car, waiting at a game, you'll get to read more again! After the dry period of not having much time to read, I started reading two, three books at a time, something I never did before I had children. Now I wait so much, I have a book or knitting with me at all times. It doesn't seem like waiting when there are words to fill the minutes!
ReplyDeletejulieyen at a o l
Shauna, thanks to you now I am inspired to read a book again and hope to find the time. Do you know that I felt the same way about when I finished your book "Gluten Free Girl"? i wanted to cuss you up and down for not making it longer! I can't wait for your new one. And maybe I'll win your copy so I have something warm to read in the meantime. Jill at jillduncan77@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteI was just looking for a new book to read - thanks so much for the suggestion!
ReplyDeleteSounds like she talks about food the way YOU talk about food?! I can't wait to read it. And I have no baby and no other good excuse, so I am going to turn off the TV and enjoy the luxury of being able to read. Thanks for reminding me to savor my books as well as my food. :)
ReplyDeleteShauna,
ReplyDeleteI could really use a good book right now. That is, one read for pleasure rather than school course work. Please pick me!
A lovely book? I could use one of those!
ReplyDeleteoh books... when i first had my girl and all she did was sleep i couldn't figure what people were talking about; i read all the time. and then she woke up! i am learning to surrender to motherhood. small glimpses of books in those late night hours. i just finished my 800 page book and it took me months. i love the idea of passing on books. i like to write my name and location and the date in a really good book and mail it to a friend far far away. it's almost romantic. i also felt that way about middlesex. i think i read it in 2 days. i'm glad you found a book to finish. good luck on the next one!
ReplyDeleteannieoftherose@yahoo.com
Oh, I love books... and food...and cooking...SOoo...a novel about food sounds delicious!
ReplyDeleteSusan
dunbardiva@yahoo.com
Shauna and Danny, oh my, how are you ever going to read all these! LOL!
ReplyDeleteI am sure you will not pick me waaaaay down here at the bottom. And that is OK. I just wanted to say that I am actually working on a book proposal, and I find that reading Shakespeare is a good way to read while writing... Shakespeare's words can't really 'sneak' into anything!
OK, back to Hamlet. :D
Susan
It's funny how many comments you get when you are giving something away - good way to get readers to delurk : )
ReplyDeleteSounds like that book would be a great new friend.
Hi,
ReplyDeleteI'd love to win this. Thanks for the chance.
J
hiya mama!
ReplyDeleteits (almond glory: ) carri!!
congrats on EVERYTHING.
all of it.
most of all babybean, of course.
lovelove
cz
fiction about food is my favorite . . . fingers crossed
ReplyDeleteI finished a course on the psychology of food and haven't been able to stop reading about food experiences since! I also spend my time reading cookbooks like novels and getting teased for tearing up when I find something I miss that I can change to GF!
ReplyDeletemmphaup at roanoke dot edu