Ulrike Gies: Cookbook of the Dead

Ulrike Gies remembers. Of pear compote, buns with onions and beer, an Indonesian menu with seventeen courses, butter cream cake and cauliflower. Taste and smell outlast anything that has otherwise long since decayed, and just as Proust once did, whose childhood comes back to him when he eats a madeleine, burnt dumplings or lentil soup also transport Gies back in time. She takes us there, on a culinary journey - through her stomach into the past, but also into her everyday life, her dreams and experiences.

The author

 

prose | 1st edition 2018 | Hardcover with dust jacket | 160 pages

19,80

Ulrike Gies: Cookbook of the Dead

ISBN 978-3-944201-53-5 Genres ,

Description

In fragments, associative, open and often abrupt, white beans evoke memories, preserve the life of the dead, even though the parents have long since died, as has the great love and the body is trapped in a wheelchair. Soberly and mercilessly she describes her mother's illness, the disgusting uncle, the aunt's funeral, conversations at table or the neighbors' family, and humorously and dryly dissects her own life. Reflections on death and life run through the book like aphorisms – the topic of food: a framework for the memoirs.

Ulrike Gies' story is about dreams, experiences and memories - memories of the deceased and memories of recipes. She describes scenes from her childhood, but also stories from her everyday life today. Soberly she talks about her mother's illness and her aunt's funeral – even about death itself. In a humorous way, she portrays great-aunt Lisa's idiosyncrasies and the ailments of getting older. The connection with nut cake, lentil soup and Indonesian rice tables make the book one Cookbook of the Dead.

 

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The author takes us on a culinary journey - through her stomach into the past, but also into her everyday life, her dreams and experiences. In fragments, associative, open and often abrupt, white beans evoke memories, preserve the life of the dead, even though the parents have long since died, as has the great love and the body is trapped in a wheelchair. more

Additional information

Weight 300 g
Dimensions 120 × 190 mm

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