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Books by
Jim Crace


THE PESTHOUSE

GENESIS

THE DEVIL'S LARDER

BEING DEAD

THE DEVIL'S LARDER
Jim Crace
Farrar Straus & Giroux
Fiction
ISBN-10: 0374138591
ISBN-13: 9780374138592


When I began reading the first of the 64 short vignettes that comprise Jim Crace's THE DEVIL'S LARDER, certain early conclusions formed. Food was to be the theme of each of the diminutive tableaux in the tiny volume. But by the time I reached, all too soon, the last of the 163 pages, I was reminded once again that forming early conclusions is the intellectual process that keeps the Las Vegas wedding chapel industry in the chips.

THE DEVIL'S LARDER is not about food. Food is there, certainly, in each of the exquisitely crafted little stories. But to say that these stories are about food is like saying that Saving Private Ryan is a movie about Tom Hanks. So what are these stories about? And why are they so affecting? I understood the day after I first opened the book.

I had a serious craving for apple pie. One minute I'm fine, and the next thing I know there's an apple pie cooling on the windowsill of my mind, as the sounds of children playing on a creaking swing set are carried in on a fragrant summer breeze that billows the simple cotton curtains. Hey, it's my mind. Back off. 

There are those who say that food is fuel. For Jim Crace and THE DEVIL'S LARDER, food is exactly that, but in a sense that has absolutely nothing to do with nutrition or digestion. To be more precise, in Crace's remarkably rich little explorations, food is a medium through which passes the entire breadth and scope of human emotion and interaction. Nostalgia, temptation, guilt, violence, lust, gratification, risk, delusion, and fear. But there is no pie. Pie is not the issue. Hunger is not the issue.

Some of these stories cover three or four pages; most require only a few paragraphs, and one is exactly two words long, which makes the wit and depth and power on display all the more surprising. And satisfying.

It is difficult to avoid using food analogies to describe THE DEVIL'S LARDER. Thank Jim Crace for that. His stories demonstrate that as an element critical to human survival, food has taken root in our ability to express thought and emotion. Try to get through any conversation without using a food-related metaphor and you'll see what I mean. Have you ever had to swallow a bitter pill? Eat humble pie? Do you have a sweet disposition? Do you drive a lemon? Do you have a gravy job? Did you sugarcoat some bad news? Do you know on which side your bread is buttered? Do you bring home the bacon?

There's a reason that the language of food has permeated the language of expression. Jim Crace understands this. Reading THE DEVIL'S LARDER makes it all very clear and, if you'll forgive me, very palatable.

   --- Reviewed by Bob Rhubart

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