Appetite for Life: The Biography of Julia Child by Noel Riley Fitch

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: April 1999
  • 592pp
  • Sales Rank: 2,693
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    Reader Rating: (4 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 1999
    • Publisher: Random House Inc
    • Format: Paperback, 592pp
    • Sales Rank: 2,693

    Synopsis

    An authorized look at the life of one of the world's best-loved gourmets.

    Publishers Weekly

    Julia McWilliams was always adventurously hunting for food to fill her 6'2" frame. When, in her late 20s, the Smith College-educated Californian took a wartime job with the OSS that sent her to Ceylon (Sri Lanka) and China, she began cultivating a taste for authentic eatables as an alternative to service fare. Almost resigned to spinsterhood, she met and married Cambridge, Mass.-born government official Paul Child, who was on Asian duty, and accompanied him to his USIA posts in France and Germany. A gastronomical epiphany that occurred in Rouen, at the bistro where the couple once lunched, led her to attend the Cordon Bleu cooking school in Parisand the rest is history. In 1961, Child published the three-pound bestseller Mastering the Art of French Cooking when she was 49, and a few years later she was a TV superstar conducting gustatory symphonies with whisks and pans and patter. Her life is told warmly and compellingly by Fitch, author of several books on literary and culinary Paris, who nicely captures Child's exuberant mannerisms and plummy voice that fans know so well. Her graphic diary-letters, extracted at length by Fitch, register the couple's experiences together and the emotions they shared. Now in her mid-80s, Child lives in a retirement village in Santa Barbara, Calif. (Oct.)

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    Biography

    Noël Riley Fitch is the author of Sylvia Beach and the Lost Generation: A History of Literary Paris in the Twenties and Thirties and Anaïs: The Erotic Life of Anaïs Nin, as well as other books chronicling the French-American artistic experience. She lives with her husband in Los Angeles and on the Left Bank in Paris. She has one grown daughter.

    Customer Reviews

    Bigger and Betterby sleeper19395

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    October 04, 2009: Julie Child was a large women with an matching appetite for good food, adventure and a 'well-lived' life. This book is filled with small details of her many associations in the diplomatic and foodie world. A leisurely journey through her childhood, early work experiences and married life. While it includes no recipes it does follow the evolution of several of her more famous recipes, notable her Queen of Sheba cake, as they evolve along with Child's own tastes. The book glosses over some of the more bitter struggles in the food world as I imagine did Julie herself. Although a California girl, she adopted the 'Northeasterner' attitude of acknowledging a problem, solving it to the best of one's ability and then getting on with life. Everyone can learn something from this book, in food or life.

    Such a Let Downby donna-chaos

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    September 28, 2009: The book was a dreadful who's who look at the intelligencia of the era rather than an exploration of the character. I was bogged down from the first 20 pages with who sat next to who at dinner. Most of the members of my book club were unable to finish.


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