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COMFORT FOOD DIARIES

Emily Nunn

My Quest for the Perfect Dish to Mend a Broken Heart

In the tradition of Elizabeth Gilbert and Ruth Reichl, former New Yorker editor Emily Nunn chronicles her journey to heal old wounds and find comfort in the face of loss through travel, home-cooked food, and the company of friends and family.
One life-changing night, reeling from her beloved brother's sudden death, a devastating breakup with her handsome engineer fiancé and eviction from the apartment they shared, Emily Nunn had lost all sense of family, home, and financial security. After a few glasses of wine, heartbroken and unmoored, Emily - an avid cook and professional food writer - poured her heart out on Facebook. The next morning she woke up with an awful hangover and a feeling she'd made a terrible mistake - only to discover she had more friends than she knew, many of whom invited her to come visit and cook with them while she put her life back together. Thus began the Comfort Food Tour.

Searching for a way forward, Emily travels the country, cooking and staying with relatives and friends. She also travels back to revisit scenes from her dysfunctional Southern upbringing, dominated by her dramatic, unpredictable mother and her silent, disengaged father. Her wonderfully idiosyncratic aunts and uncles and cousins come to life in these pages, all part of the rich Southern story in which past and present are indistinguishable, food is a source of connection and identity, and a good story is often preferred to a not-so-pleasant truth. But truth, pleasant or not, is what Emily Nunn craves, and with it comes an acceptance of the losses she has endured, and a sense of hope for the future.

In the salty snap of a single Virginia ham biscuit, in the sour tang of Grandmother's Lemon Cake, Nunn experiences the healing power of comfort food - and offers up dozens of recipes for the wonderful meals that saved her life. With the biting humor of David Sedaris and the emotional honesty of Cheryl Strayed, Nunn delivers a moving account of her descent into darkness and her gradual, hard-won return to the living.


Emily Nunn is a freelance food writer and home-cooking evangelist living in North Carolina. She worked for almost a decade at The New Yorker, where she was an arts editor covering both theater and restaurants (she created Tables for Two, the magazine's restaurant column) and as an award-winning features reporter at the Chicago Tribune. Her writing about the arts has been featured in Vogue, Men's Vogue, Elle, Details, Departures; her food writing has been featured in Food and Wine, Men's Vogue, and the Chicago Tribune Magazine, among other publications.
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Book

Published 2017-09-26 by Atria

Book

Published 2017-09-26 by Atria

Comments

Never preachy or smug, Nunn's memoir of healing is full of warm, bracing honesty and the humor and paradox in family memories and sprinkled liberally with the type of recipes that will make book-club members say, "I could make that!

Humorous and moving.. A candid memoir of despair and triumph over depressing. Nourishing, truthful reflections on family, friends, and love all wrapped up in the idea of food as sustenance for both the body and the soul.

Gorgeous and moving... With powerful prose and rich details, [Nunn's] memoir is simultaneously uplifting and heartbreaking.

Emily Nunn's THE COMFORT FOOD DIARIES is a beautiful story of hunger, nurturing, and recovery. Written with candor and an often hilarious Southern Gothic edge, it is everything great food memoir should be: delicious, delightful, heart-rending, soul-filling, and ultimately, healing.

I devoured this funny, brave, unexpected, mouth-watering story of a road trip, from bitterness to sweet, but a woman who faced the wipeout of life as she knew it by cooking up some comfort. The act of preparing food, (and eating it!) as a way of addressing sorrow can be viewed as some kind of pathology, but to me, it's one of the healthier ways a person can express love, and this marvelous memoir is a testament to just how that happens.

Combining elements of food, travel, and family histories, this engrossing account will interest everyone from culinary memoir lovers to general audiences.

The Comfort Food Diaries is nothing less than a tour de force by Emily Nunn, our most hilarious and touching food writer. You'll laugh, you'll cry ... and you'll get hungry.

Everything I hoped for: hilarious and heartbreaking in equal measure. The recipes are perfectly placed, like musical interludes, and fun to read. The only thing better than reading this book would be having Emily Nunn in your kitchen, whipping up a generous batch of corn bread and pinto beans and making you laugh until you cry, or vice versa.

Come for the poignant personal reflections, stay for the recipes for country ham biscuits and grandma's lemon cake.