The Anthony Bourdain reader New, classic, and rediscovered writing

Anthony Bourdain

Book - 2025

"Anthony Bourdain represented many things to many people--and he had many sides. But no part of his identity was more important to him, and more long-lasting, than that of a writer. The Anthony Bourdain Reader is a collection of his best and most fascinating writing, and touches on his many pursuits and passions, from restaurant life to family life to the "low life," from TV to travel through places like Vietnam, Buenos Aires, Paris, and Shanghai. The Anthony Bourdain Reader is also a showcase for new and never-before-seen material, like diary entries from Bourdain's first trip to France as a teenager and "It's Cruel and Unforgiving Terrain," a piece on the New York restaurant scene, as well as unpublished... short fiction like "I Quit My Job Yesterday" and chapters from No New Messages, his unfinished novel. These newly discovered pieces all contribute to give the fullest picture of the man behind the books."--

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Subjects
Genres
Anecdotes
Autobiographies
diaries
Diaries
Personal narratives
Fiction
Published
New York, NY : Ecco, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Anthony Bourdain (author)
Other Authors
Patrick Radden Keefe, 1976- (writer of foreword)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xviii. 488 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780062863959
  • Eating and drinking
  • Family
  • Rage
  • Being a Chef
  • The Low Life
  • Vietnam
  • Restlessness
  • Television
  • The Restaurant.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An anthology that ranges across both Bourdain's core writings and his lesser works. Bourdain, notes editor Witherspoon, "had wanted to be a writer all his life." His fame as the host of several television travel series, she adds, was accidental: The gigs were someone else's idea, but as long as he got to write, it was fine. Some of the pieces assembled here are near-transcripts from those shows, and longtime fans will hear Bourdain's voice in every word, as when he eats a street taco in the Mexican city of Puebla: "You quickly shove one of the tacos into your mouth, wash it down with a big pull from a can of cold Tecate--which you've previously rubbed with lime and jammed into a plate of salt, encrusting the top--and you can feel your eyes roll up into your head." Elsewhere, alcohol being a constant, Bourdain celebrates a Sardinian wine made by "an old man sitting in the corner reading a soccer magazine, a cigarette dangling from his lips," and declaring that he wouldn't trade a trunkful of big-ticket vintages for the rustic red; offers lessons on how to drink vodka in Russia ("knock back your entire shot in one gulp"); and populates his fictions with woozy, boozy characters ("Naturally, work like this required alcohol"). There are other drugs aplenty as well, befitting Bourdain's longtime worship of Hunter S. Thompson and the culture of restaurant work in the golden 1970s and '80s: "We thought ourselves dangerous, trend-settingly debauched, and, of course, in no time at all, had made a serious botch of it all." But whatever his topic, absent a few forgettable pieces of juvenilia, Bourdain delivers whip-smart, mot juste, and funny pronouncements on the world. And never mind that he condones putting ketchup on a hamburger. A welcome gathering of work by a writer--and traveler, chef, and truth teller--gone too soon. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.