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Mme Proust and the Kosher Kitchen
Mme Proust and the Kosher Kitchen | Kate Taylor, Taylor
2 posts | 11 to read
Stretching between turn-of-the-century Paris and contemporary Canada, Mme Proust and the Kosher Kitchen is the story of three women whose lives intersect across time to reveal the intrinsic bonds of our collective and personal histories. It is a rich and compassionate debut, a novel that encourages us to explore the depths of love and memory, of life and of art. Unable to escape the pain of her unrequited love for Max Segal, Marie Prevost travels to Paris in order to study the writing of her other great amour: the novelist Marcel Proust. Marie is bilingual and works as a simultaneous translator in Montreal, and believes that reading Proust s original papers will give her insights into love and loss that just may mend her broken heart. But when Marie arrives in Paris, Marcel remains as elusive as Max: the strict officials at the Biblioteque Nationale only allow her access to the peripheral papers of File 263 -- a much ignored and poorly catalogued collection of the diaries kept by Jeanne Proust, Marcel s mother. Despite the head librarian s opinion that they contain only the natterings of a housewife, Marie begins to translate them, and discovers that Jean Proust s diary is as illuminating for what is "not" said as what is there. Entwined with Marie s story are the diary entries that she has translated: Jeanne Proust s records of day-to-day life in her Paris household, which make up the second strand of this novel. Jeanne s diary includes all aspects of life at 9 Boulevard Malesherbes, everything from the difficulties of cutting rich desserts from the dinner menu to the latest Parisian headlines to her fears for the health and literary ambitions of Marcel. She s a worrier, Madame Proust, but also ferociously protective and supportive of her frail son, and the trials of her small world come across as powerfully as the goings-on outside her doors. Madame Proust s diary entries, particularly those from the height of the Dreyfus Affair, also convey her experiences as a Jewish woman within a prominent Catholic family and a privileged social class. And it is this thread that makes Marie recognize the difficulties of finding the woman s true voice, given the atrocities to come during the Second World War. As she continues her work, Marie increasingly explores the devastation of the Holocaust and wonders about our collective responsibility to remembering -- and recording -- it s truths. Her explorations of Paris, first limited to the Proustian tour, begin to include memorial sites such as the one at Drancy, a transit camp on the route to Auschwitz. During her travels she comes across references to Max s mother s family, the Bensimons, and begins to make connections between the overbearing mother Max so often complains about and Madame Proust. She also starts to recognize the horrible burden Sarah Segal must carry. Sarah s story is the third strand of this novel. Sarah Segal -- nee Bensimon, then Simon -- was sent to Canada from France at age twelve, just as the Nazis were beginning to round up Parisian Jews. Growing up with her foster family in Toronto, she is never able to escape the loss of her parents, and as a young woman she travels back to Paris to discover that they did, in fact, die at Auschwitz. But despite -- and perhaps due to -- finding out what happened to them, Sarah is unable to fully adjust to her life in Canada. She doesn t know how to communicate with her son or her husband, and finds even the most mundane domestic events overwhelming. It is only when she retreats to her kitchen, determined to fuse her French and Jewish histories by mastering a kosher version of classic French cuisine, that she begins to face her sorrow head on. Mme Proust and the Kosher Kitchen" "is Kate Taylor s first novel, and has been highly praised by reviewers. Most comment on Taylor s wonderful ability to weave together three distinct stories in such a way that the larger truths emerge from among their combined details, and on the subtle way she is able to meld history and fiction. As one literary critic has stated, Mme Proust and the Kosher Kitchen" "marks the stunning emergence of a writer from whom we can expect much in the future. "
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StaceyKondla
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I am posting one book per day from my extensive to-be-read collection. No description and providing no reason for wanting to read it, I just do. Some will be old, some will be new. Don‘t judge me - I have a lot of books. Join the fun if you want.
This is day 202 #bookstoread #tbrpile #bookstagram

LeahBergen I‘ve had this one unread on my shelves for YEARS. 😆 4y
StaceyKondla @LeahBergen - glad I‘m not the only one 😂💕 4y
52 likes2 comments
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LeahBergen
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#EyesOnCovers
This novel is told through three interconnected lives living in different times: a woman from Montreal researching Proust, the life of Proust's Jewish mother as told through her "discovered" diary and a Toronto woman attempting to replicate French cuisine in a kosher kitchen. #TBR
#MayBookFlowers

Hobbinol Seriously?! How did I not know about this one?! I stacked it so fast my thumb hurts...❤️❗️ 7y
LeahBergen @Hobbinol I was thinking of you when I posted this and figured that the name "Proust" would make your scrolling come to a screeching halt. ? 7y
batsy This sounds amazing. How did you find the book? 7y
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LeahBergen @batsy I haven't read it yet! 😬 7y
batsy @LeahBergen Haha! That's basically me and most of my books, so it's a relief to hear someone else say it too 😊 7y
LeahBergen @batsy I get rid of a lot of books after I've read them so many of the ones on my shelves are still TBR. And those are the ones that end up in Litsy posts! 😂 7y
batsy @LeahBergen This seems like a thoroughly practical way of managing one's accumulation of books ☺️ 7y
88 likes10 stack adds7 comments