The Devil's Larder

The Devil's Larder

by JimCrace (Author)

Synopsis

The Devil's Larder, another uniquely imaginative book from Jim Crace, is a cumulative novel in sixty-four parts, catering not only for our taste buds but also for our cultural, sexual and imaginative appetites. Crace's readers might learn that little is to be trusted about food from these hilarious, delightful and subversive ingredients, but they will encounter a startling and touching patchwork portrait of a community where meals are served with lashings of passion and recipes come spiced with unexpected challenges and hopes. Beware allergic reactions: The Devil's Larder may contain traces of nuts, genetically modified products and fatal toxins.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 208
Edition: 1st Edition
Publisher: Viking
Published: 06 Sep 2001

ISBN 10: 0670881457
ISBN 13: 9780670881451

Media Reviews
Jim Crace remains one of the most individual and elegant writers at work today. His books customarily defy category, and the new one, The Devil's Larder, is no exception. The cover shows a sensuous female mouth crammed full of berries, with the juice running down her chin, and the book's attitude to food is correspondingly erotic. The concept of a literary feast (ie a novel in which food is central to the structure) is not new, but has never been handled with the sheer imagination and indulgence we find here. This is a cumulative novel in 64 parts, in which the reader's cultural, culinary and sexual appetites are fully catered for in a discursive, episodic narrative. There is no plot as such, more a vividly realised series of anecdotes in which the briefly appearing characters come to life before our eyes through the indulgence of their various appetites. In these pages, a whole community and its varied inhabitants is vividly conjured up by evocative fragments that coalesce into a rich tapestry. The reader may not always be sure about what is going on, but the journey is highly pleasurable. We are invited to a restaurant that offers dishes going far beyond the borders of good taste; we can sample the delights of blind pie, a dish created for revenge; and we may try the fruit of the love-leaf tree that can do wonders for a relationship. The language has a Nabokov-like precision and resonance (although the refusal to deliver a straightforward narrative recalls Borges).
Author Bio
Jim Crace is the author of six novels, most recently Being Dead and before that Quarantine which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and won the Whitbread Novel of the Year Prize. He is also a past winner of the Whitbread First Novel Prize, the E.M.Forster Award and the Guardian Fiction Award. He lives in Birmingham with his wife and two children.