Julie and Julia: My Year of Cooking Dangerously by Julie Powell

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: September 2006
  • 336pp
  • Sales Rank: 1,971

Reader Rating: (159 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Originality" See All

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
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    • Features

    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2006
    • Publisher: Little, Brown & Company
    • Format: Paperback, 336pp
    • Sales Rank: 1,971

    Synopsis

    With the humor of Bridget Jones and the vitality of Augusten Burroughs, Julie Powell recounts how she conquered every recipe in Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking and saved her soul.

    Julie Powell is 30 years old, living in a tiny apartment in Queens and working at a soul-sucking secretarial job that's going nowhere. She needs something to break the monotony of her life, and she invents a deranged assignment. She will take her mother's worn, dog-eared copy of Julia Child's 1961 classic Mastering the Art of French Cooking, and she will cook all 524 recipes -- in the span of one year.

    At first she thinks it will be easy. But as she moves from the simple Potage Parmentier (potato soup) into the more complicated realm of aspics and crepes, she realizes there's more to Mastering the Art of French Cooking than meets the eye.

    And somewhere along the line she realizes she has turned her outer-borough kitchen into a miracle of creation and cuisine. She has eclipsed her life's ordinariness through spectacular humor, hysteria, and perseverance.

    About the Author
    Born and raised in Austin, Texas, JULIE POWELL has resided in one place or another in the outer boroughs of New York City for the past eight years. Currently, she lives in Long Island City, New York, with her husband, Eric, three cats, and a snake.

    The New York Times Book Review - David Kamp

    When she's focused on the cooking itself, Powell shows signs of being one of our better, loopier culinary thinkers, more in the iconoclast mode of M. F. K. Fisher than the rhapsodic, sun-dappled vein of Saveur magazine at its most-perfect-peach fetishizing.

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    Biography

    Julie Powell was on the verge of turning 30, trapped in a series of unfulfilling temp jobs, and living in a dreadful apartment in Queens, New York. That’s when she decided to break the monotony by attempting to make all 524 recipes in Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking. One year later, Powell had achieved her goal, documented her experiences on one of the most popular blogs on the Internet, and began the award-winning, bestselling book Julie and Julia: My Year of Cooking Dangerously.

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    Customer Reviews

    The movie is betterby Snaboo

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    January 24, 2010: Rarely do I say this, but in this case, the movie is really better. What is lacking in the book is the insight to Julia Childs' life, which comes over really well in the movie. Julie Powell has a nice way of writing, honest memoir, and very funny at times. But it is too self-centered, too much redundancy (yes we get it, being a secretary, friend who changes boyfriends all the time, government job, coming home to cook from the recipe book). But the depth is missing here, and I find myself getting bored. It would have been nice for Julie to step out of her life and explore the Julia Childs behind the recipes, as the movie does so well.

    It's not the movie...by mjk44

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    January 23, 2010: Always reading the book before watching the movie, I actually liked the movie better. A lot of the book was how the cooking went...it started out funny, and then ended up being a part you'd want to skip over. More recipes than how it grew the character. I finished teh book, but it took awhile; I never got to the point that I couldn't put it down.


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