Frida's Cook : A Novel

Florencia Etcheves

Book - 2026

Saved in:
1 copy ordered
Subjects
Published
Atria Books 2026.
Language
English
Main Author
Florencia Etcheves (-)
Other Authors
Beth Fowler (-)
Physical Description
368 p.
ISBN
9781668076156
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

Having fled her family and an arranged marriage in Oaxaca in 1939, Nayeli Cruz winds up in Mexico City, right in front of Frida Kahlo's famed home, La Caza Azul. Frida takes her in as a cook and thus begins a long friendship. Drawn into Frida's world of art, passion, pain, and her tempestuous love for Diego Rivera, Nayeli's life becomes intertwined with this fascinating artist. In the parallel story set in Buenos Aires in 2018, Nayeli's granddaughter Paloma is reeling from the pain of losing her beloved grandmother. As she begins to come to terms with the loss of the woman who raised her, Paloma realizes that she did not know Nayeli as well as she thought she did. Among Nayeli's belongings, Paloma discovers a painting of her grandmother as a young woman. The painting bears no signature, so the identity of the artist is unknown. But when someone turns up dead, Paloma realizes there might be some secrets that are best left uncovered. VERDICT Etcheves's first novel to be translated into English intertwines multiple narratives that can be a bit confusing. Readers who persevere will be rewarded with a rich historical fiction story of Frida Kahlo, layered with art, food, and mystery.--Margie Ticknor

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A lively new fictional take on Frida Kahlo. In her first novel to be published in English, Argentinian journalist and detective novelist Etcheves imagines into being Nayeli Cruz, a Tehuana who leaves her home in a small village at age 14 in 1939 and makes her way to Mexico City, where Frida Kahlo, in her 30s, recently separated from Diego Rivera and well-saturated with brandy, sees her in the street, believes her to be the "imaginary friend" of her childhood--a cheerful ballerina--and invites her to come inside and become her cook. In snappy little chapters, Etcheves alternates this story with one that takes place in 2018 in Buenos Aires. Here, Nayeli has just died and her granddaughter, Paloma, discovers that she's left her a mysterious painting, a nude figure of Nayeli as a young woman with a red splotch that resembles a ballerina in the corner. The author throws herself into the story of Nayeli, Frida, and Diego with abandon, if not subtlety. She uses the already vivid details of the artists' lives, but isn't afraid to branch out from them, hinting at ways in which Nayeli may have inspired her employer, or to amp up the drama: "Love and passion devastated Frida; they drove her towards the abyss," she writes. The contemporary section of the novel is even more convoluted, complete with art forgers, murderers, estranged parents and children, a beautiful older woman connected with Nayeli's past, and a whole series of double-crosses. Fans of Kahlo's work might be put off by the borderline caricatured depiction of her here, but the novelist's breezily complicated plot will keep readers turning pages. A colorful if melodramatic tribute to a fascinating figure. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1: Buenos Aires, August 2018 1 Buenos Aires, August 2018 My grandmother was an expert on other people's deaths. Mexicans have an intimate, almost carnal relationship with the art of dying, and that made her something of an authority on the subject. As though hoping to offend it or drive it away, she gave death mocking nicknames that turned it into a skeletal, hairless old crone: La Huesuda, La Parca, La Chingada, La Pelona. But no amount of defiance could hold off the inevitable. "The party's going on without me, mi niña," she murmured as I rested my hand on hers. The powerful torrent of her voice had weakened to barely a trickle. "La Huesuda is close by; I've seen her. Can't you smell her?" On the nightstand, a glass jar with water and slices of orange and ginger filled the room with the smell of citrus, an aroma that took me back to childhood afternoons, those hours sitting at my grandmother's kitchen table following her precise instructions: cut limes and grapefruits into nice thin slices, combine rosemary, bay, thyme, and mint in piles no bigger than my palm, and crush vanilla pods and cinnamon sticks in the stone mortar until you have a powder like fine sand. The alchemist who had taught me to make natural room fragrances was lying in bed, slumped back against the white pillowcases, swaddled up to her chest in one of those dark purple woolen blankets that make every geriatric bed look the same. "I hope the exit is joyful, and I hope never to return," she declared. I didn't know how to reply, so I made do with squeezing that bony hand, which time had worn down to the size of a child's, and eyed a pot of cream sitting next to the orange aromatizer. Opening it carefully, I sank my fingers into the gloopy white concoction; with my free hand, I pulled off the purple blanket and slowly slid back her nightdress. My grandmother's legs still held their shape and tone. She had always claimed to have a ballerina's legs, and no one had ever dared refute it. The years had discolored her brown skin; any veins that were once hidden had started to show themselves, forming a pattern resembling a map scored by thin rivers that stretched from her ankles to her thighs, crossing her knees at either side. I followed those blue lines, depositing small dabs of moisturizing cream as I went. When her legs were covered in white dots, I used my palms to massage them, slowly but firmly. Every muscle, every pore, every inch. I paused at the birthmark on the side of her right thigh, just above the knee: a complete oval the size of a coin. My grandmother tended to wear skirts long enough to cover the spot but short enough to show off the perfect curves of her calves. But on hot summer nights, her thin muslin nightdresses allowed me a glimpse of that mark that, to my child's eyes, made her special. As I stroked the dark chocolate-colored outline with my index finger, I remembered her reaction when I asked how she got the mark. She had swiftly smoothed down her dress, as though I had caught her doing something wrong. Staring at the floor, she told me in a whisper that many years ago, in her native Oaxaca, a group of hunters had stopped to rest by a huge rock on a hill. On that rock, they found a silhouette drawing of a naked woman with long, long braids and a mark on her thigh. Nearby, they found vast amounts of lead ore. Without hesitation, thinking of all the bullets they could make, the hunters filled their bags. Most of those men were never seen again. The locals swore that at night they could hear their terrified cries. Only one returned and, with a panicked look in his eyes, claimed repeatedly that the naked woman with the braids and the mark on her leg had the demon in her. My grandmother swore that she was a direct descendant of that Indigenous woman. And I was so convinced that for a long time I used to draw the birthmark on my own leg with a brown pen. It was the only way I could feel like I truly belonged to my grandmother's lineage. A rather ineffectual way that vanished every night with soap and water. "That's it, Paloma. It's time to let her go. She has to follow her path," said one of the nurses, placing a warm hand on my shoulder. Nayeli Cruz, my grandmother, the magical Mexican, died at the age of ninety-two, before I could finish rubbing cream into her ballerina legs. Excerpted from Frida's Cook: A Novel by Florencia Etcheves All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.