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Hungry Woman in Paris by Josefina Lopez

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: March 2009
  • 288pp
  • Sales Rank: 134,184
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    Reader Rating: (11 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Offbeat" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2009
    • Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
    • Format: Paperback, 288pp
    • Sales Rank: 134,184

    Synopsis

    A journalist and activist, Canela believes passion is essential to life; but lately passion seems to be in short supply. It has disappeared from her relationship with her fiancé, who is more interested in controlling her than encouraging her. It's absent from her work, where censorship and politics keep important stories from being published. And while her family is full of outspoken individuals, the only one Canela can truly call passionate is her cousin and best friend Luna, who just took her own life.

    Canela can't recover from Luna's death. She is haunted by her ghost and feels acute pain for the dreams that went unrealized. Canela breaks off her engagement and uses her now un-necessary honeymoon ticket, to escape to Paris. Impulsively, she sublets a small apartment and enrolls at Le Coq Rouge, Paris's most prestigious culinary institute.

    Cooking school is a sensual and spiritual reawakening that brings back Canela's hunger for life. With a series of new friends and lovers, she learns to once again savor the world around her. Finally able to cope with Luna's death, Canela returns home to her family, and to the kind of life she thought she had lost forever.

    Publishers Weekly

    Screenwriter Lopez ventures into fiction with her abysmal chronicle of a depressed journalist who learns to cook while attempting to find herself in Paris. After calling off her engagement and after her cousin Luna's suicide, Canela begins losing it, but comes out of her funk once she decides to use her honeymoon tickets to Paris. Upon hearing that she can extend her stay by attending culinary school, Canela signs up, and soon she's in the sack with her class translator, as well as a handful of strangers and chefs. Canela also reflects on her childhood as an illegal immigrant and her status as a woman and once-again foreigner. Mixed in are a number of clunky digs against the Bush administration. Lopez has a hard time making the elements fuse, and her narrative is choppy and amateurish, with scenes swinging from frantic kitchen action through dreamy philosophizing to graphic sex and back. Often mentioned are the famous expat writers who made their names in Paris, but this work is far below theirs. (Mar.)

    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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    Biography

    Born in San Luis Potosi, Mexico in 1969, Josefina López was five years old when she and her family immigrated to the United States and settled in East Los Angeles. Best known for co-authoring the film Real Women Have Curves, Josefina is the recipient of a number of awards and accolades, including formal recognition from U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer's 7th Annual "Women Making History" banquet in 1998 and a screenwriting fellowship from the California Arts Council in 2001. She, along with Real Women Have Curves co-author George La Voo, won the Humanitas Prize for Screenwriting in 2002, The Gabriel Garcia Marquez Award from L.A. Mayor in 2003, and the Artist-in-Residency grant from the NEA/TCG for 2007.

    This is her first novel: Josefina resides in Boyle Heights and considers herself a "Renaissance Woman".

    Customer Reviews

    BOO!!!!!by hd1993

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    July 10, 2009: This is by far the worst book I have EVER read. Unless you want to read about pathetic sex stories and pathetic characters than go right ahead and read this book. This book sounded like it was suppose to be about cooking but in stead it's about sex and as hard as the author TRYED to make cooking exciting she didn't succeed. I will never read a book by Josefina Lopez again!

    shame on meby Anonymous

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    May 22, 2009: Shame on me for buying this book based on having seen the enjoyable movie, Real Women Have Curves, and for not having read the first full chapter. What an utter disappointment.

    This book is so poorly written and edited that I cannot believe it made it to market. It was NOT dramatic, nor touching, nor romantic, nor thrilling. It was a lot of episodes haphazardly joined to ..who knows?


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