Famed stylist Brite (Lost Souls, 1992) abandons the horror field to
follow her bliss into a mainstream novel set in the food world and
restaurants of her adopted home, New Orleans. Most recently
(Plastic Jesus, 2000), Brite took on John Lennon and Paul McCartney
as alter egos for her heroes, but her style had none of the soaring
excess that powers her best work, nor was she up to finding prose
equal to the Beatles' sublimity, as she was able for R.Crumb's
penwork and Charlie Parker's bop sax in Drawing Blood. Exquisite
Corpse was a splatterpunk stunt. Aside from descriptions of
original alcohol-soaked viands, this outing finds Brite restrained
to bloodlessness. Two gay cooks, Rickey and G-man, who've been best
friends since childhood and now live together, drink together, and
often work together in kitchens of varied New Orleans restaurants,
aspire to open their own restaurant and present a cuisine whose
every dish is laced, soaked, spiced or in some way flavored with
fine liquors. The restaurant's name: Liquor. This offers Brite some
fancy moments, as in describing a tender (nonalcoholic) Gulf shrimp
appetizer "spiked with tasso ham, tossed in a spicy beurre blanc,
set atop a pool of five-pepper jelly, and garnished with pickled
okra. The dish had a bright, complex flavor: first you tasted the
sweetness of the shrimp and butter, then the gastrique's sourness
and the tart burn of the peppers." The author brings more energy to
her cooking, though, than to her plot, which turns on the two lads
being backed by high-roller Lenny Duveteaux, who may have crooked
reasons for backing them. One waits for a Mafia tie to rise up and
add some oregano to the French cuisine. But it's not forthcoming,
and we're left with a villain who is a cokehead chef who hates
Rickey, wants to do him in, but fails in villainous brilliance.
Showy, but seldom the great Balzac Ian roars of kitchen hell.
(Kirkus Reviews)
New Orleans natives Rickey and G-man are lifetime friends and
down-and-out line cooks desperate to make a quick buck. When Rickey
concocts the idea of opening a restaurant in their alcohol-loving
hometown where every dish packs a spirited punch, they know they're
on their way to the bank. With some wheeling and dealing, a slew of
great recipes, and a few lucky breaks, Rickey and G-man are soon on
their way to opening Liquor, their very own restaurant. But ?rst
they need to pacify a local crank who doesn't want to see his
neighborhood disturbed, sidestep Rickey's deranged ex-boss, rein in
their big-mouth silent partner before he runs amok, and stay afloat
in a stew of corruption in a town well known for its bottom
feeders.
A manic, spicy romp through the kitchens, back alleys, dive bars,
and drug deals of the country's most sublimely ridiculous city,
author Poppy Z. Brite masterfully shakes equal parts ambition,
scandal, ?le powder, cocaine, and murder, and serves Liquor
straight up, with a twist.
General
Imprint: |
Crown Publications
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Series: |
Rickey and G-Man Series, 2 |
Release date: |
March 2004 |
First published: |
March 2004 |
Authors: |
Poppy Z. Brite
|
Dimensions: |
202 x 133 x 19mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - Trade
|
Pages: |
339 |
Edition: |
1st ed |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-4000-5007-9 |
Categories: |
Books >
Fiction >
General & literary fiction >
Modern fiction
|
LSN: |
1-4000-5007-3 |
Barcode: |
9781400050079 |
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