For our November meeting, our book club enjoyed a cozy meeting at one of our member's homes. The meeting was a festival of treats, as we sampled delicious homemade desserts and yummy tea. As our meeting started, we all agreed that this latest reading, while extensively researched and incredibly informative of women's lives during Victorian London, was quite a bit darker and more difficult to get through with the current political landscape. Going forward, our club collectively agreed that we would try to select lighter readings and reduce our annual nonfiction titles to one per year. We also decided to sneak in a few non-reading related meetings throughout the year to catch up with each other.
As we move into the busy winter months, I am hopeful that our next title will be both lighthearted and fun. Our selection for January will be a fiction title:
Butter: A Novel of Food and Murder by Asako Yuzuki
Excerpt from the agent's page:
"Butter by Asako Yuzuki follows journalist Rika
Machida through her investigation of convicted serial killer Manako
Kajii, notorious for luring in wealthy men to pay for her expensive
cooking classes, only to murder them and find another. Kajii refuses to
cooperate with the press until Rika, at the suggestion of her
kitchen-savvy friend Reiko, writes Kajii a letter asking for her recipe
for beef stew.
The ensuing correspondence and series of
meetings is closer to a masterclass in cooking than journalistic
research. Rika, the only woman in her Tokyo office, works late and
subsists on convenience store fare. At home, she rarely cooks more than a
cup of ramen. Initially, she uses these gastronomical dialogues to
explore Kajii as a subject, but soon her role takes on aspects of method
acting, as Rika transforms physically into something similar to Kajii,
gaining weight and tapping into stores of confidence and strength.
Butter depicts a vivid, panoramic view of
contemporary Japan, as seen by a cast of very different Japanese women.
The novel focuses almost entirely on relationships between women,
especially how they engage and challenge one another’s decisions and
beliefs. Asako Yuzuki uses this dynamic framework to explore
contradictions and complexities of the female experience. In a poignant
example, Kajii proclaims that there are two things she “can’t abide,
feminists and margarine,” even as she warms up to Rika and enables her
growth as a feminist.
To Kajii, waiting on death row, food is
literally to die for; whereas for Rika, the supermarket is not a
cornucopia of possibility, but an alien expanse “smelling of cold apples
and wet cardboard.” Exemplifying the list of impossible expectations
imposed on women—be pretty, but not too pretty; succeed, but don’t go
too far—the act of cooking in Butter takes on a sinister precariousness
and destabilizing power, linked with the potential to both nourish and
destroy."
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