Editorial Content for Blue Plate Special: An Autobiography of My Appetites
Contributors
Reviewer (text)
Somewhere along the line, it dawned on me that generations can have an enormous impact on how one receives and relates to the unfolding story of another person's life. In reading award-winning novelist and food writer Kate Christensen's BLUE PLATE SPECIAL --- all 354 adventurous, poignant, mundane, sensual, annoying, inspiring, and remarkable pages of it --- the dates and events dropped here and there told me that I am about half a generation older. More importantly, our mothers were born nearly a generation apart.
Why would our mothers be important? Mothers are always important when their daughters write. Mine was born in time to live most of her childhood during the Depression, followed immediately by the onset of WWII as she officially entered adulthood. Christensen's mother was born more than a decade later, entering adulthood during the post-war economic boom and the social upheaval that gave birth to bohemian culture, women's liberation and social activism --- concepts unheard of during my mom's formative years.
They came to parenthood with vastly different expectations, starting their families during the Baby Boom and Baby Bulge, respectively. My mother's generation of married couples traditionally did not divorce or separate under the weight of dysfunctional or abusive relationships. Their offspring were expected to marry just once (unless death intervened), but most of my peers tried it and found marriage a hugely flawed idea. Christensen's mother, like her daughter, journeyed through many good, bad and indifferent partners, always searching for the right one.
"...a zesty start for readers and foodies alike who yearn for an eclectic buffet of fine narrative writing spiced with masterful imagery and substance."
That hunger to search, taste, find and reflect on the ideal relationship --- with others, with oneself, with one's vocation or work, and especially with what nourishes us emotionally, spiritually and physically --- is what sets BLUE PLATE SPECIAL apart from the usual coming-of-age memoir.
As one generation continuously flows into another, points of conflict or surprise randomly burst the safe bubble called "me." But while my peers (especially females) were conditioned mainly to shut up and tough things out on the premise that maturity would eventually happen and magically turn us into complete and happy people, Christensen's cohort boldly claimed the right to unrestricted exploration.
All around me during the 1980s, I saw younger 20-somethings seeking meaning through exotic travel (each segment of BLUE PLATE SPECIAL is a place, not a dish); through pushing and tearing the various old envelopes of morality, love, or spirituality; and often living riskily outside traditional zones of self-knowledge and comfort. Ironically, their parents half a generation on the other side were often trying to do the same thing to a slightly different soundtrack. But not my parents, and not (until much later) me. That in-between context likely made BLUE PLATE SPECIAL all the more savory a dish for its vicarious delights.
Living on the momentum of sensory and emotional appetites isn't without its dangers and pain, however. Christensen makes that searingly clear at least once in every chapter of her food-filled reminiscences, which can't help extending to her interesting but often dysfunctional family, her turbulent love relationships, and her migratory life. Things break apart, break down, implode, explode, and just as surprisingly come together and reconcile as well.
Sometimes her focus is on an abundance of food, sometimes on its diversity, quality, or rarity. She also reflects memorably on the impact of abstinence from food, or on the limitations of a very selective diet. The recipes salted and peppered throughout her volume aren't there just for decoration; making them would make another layer of meaning and intimacy to the stories they accompany.
Late in her account, Christensen discovers that a long-undiagnosed gluten intolerance has had profound cumulative effects on her metabolism, body chemistry and emotional balance. The bursting of an enthusiastic omnivore's assumptions about sustenance and nutrition proved both traumatic and cathartic, extending far beyond what goes into the mouth to include also what resides in the heart.
Kate Christensen's memoir is far from definitive. To risk over-using a cliché that feels supremely appropriate here, it's truly a work-in-progress. One can only imagine what she'll have to say at the other end of her unorthodox life. This half is a zesty start for readers and foodies alike who yearn for an eclectic buffet of fine narrative writing spiced with masterful imagery and substance.
Teaser
In the tradition of M. F. K. Fisher, Laurie Colwin and Ruth Reichl, BLUE PLATE SPECIAL is a narrative in which food --- eating it, cooking it, reflecting on it --- becomes the vehicle for unpacking a life. Kate Christensen explores her history of hunger --- not just for food, but for love and confidence and a sense of belonging --- with a profound honesty, starting with her unorthodox childhood in 1960s Berkeley as the daughter of a mercurial legal activist who ruled the house with his fists.
Promo
In the tradition of M. F. K. Fisher, Laurie Colwin and Ruth Reichl, BLUE PLATE SPECIAL is a narrative in which food --- eating it, cooking it, reflecting on it --- becomes the vehicle for unpacking a life. Kate Christensen explores her history of hunger --- not just for food, but for love and confidence and a sense of belonging --- with a profound honesty, starting with her unorthodox childhood in 1960s Berkeley as the daughter of a mercurial legal activist who ruled the house with his fists.
About the Book
“To taste fully is to live fully.” For Kate Christensen, food and eating have always been powerful connectors to self and world --- “a subterranean conduit to sensuality, memory, desire.” Her appetites run deep; in her own words, she spent much of her life as “a hungry, lonely, wild animal looking for happiness and stability.” Now, having found them at last, in this passionate feast of a memoir she reflects upon her journey of innocence lost and wisdom gained, mistakes made and lessons learned, and hearts broken and mended.
In the tradition of M. F. K. Fisher, Laurie Colwin and Ruth Reichl, BLUE PLATE SPECIAL is a narrative in which food --- eating it, cooking it, reflecting on it --- becomes the vehicle for unpacking a life. Christensen explores her history of hunger --- not just for food but for love and confidence and a sense of belonging --- with a profound honesty, starting with her unorthodox childhood in 1960s Berkeley as the daughter of a mercurial legal activist who ruled the house with his fists. After a whirlwind adolescent awakening, Christensen strikes out to chart her own destiny within the literary world and the world of men, both equally alluring and dangerous. Food of all kinds, from Ho Hos to haute cuisine, remains an evocative constant throughout, not just as sustenance but as a realm of experience unto itself, always reflective of what is going on in her life. She unearths memories --- sometimes joyful, sometimes painful --- of the love between mother and daughter, sister and sister, and husband and wife, and of the times when the bonds of love were broken. Food sustains her as she endures the pain of these ruptures and fuels her determination not to settle for anything less than the love and contentment for which she’s always yearned.
The physical and emotional sensuality that defines Christensen’s fiction resonates throughout the pages of BLUE PLATE SPECIAL. A vibrant celebration of life in all its truth and complexity, this book is about embracing the world through the transformative power of food: it’s about listening to your appetites, about having faith, and about learning what is worth holding on to and what is not.






