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A feast was not a feast without more than plenty. Eating was always
in order. An offer of a dish was as good as a command to partake. A
refusal bordered on the offensive. Pressing a reluctant guest was
the highest form of hospitality. Dietary precautions were
apparently unheard of except in the case of certain chronic
ailments, and then they were accepted as one of life's worst evils.
To eat well was to be well, and the natural conclusion was that the
best cure in case of trouble was to eat. -from Chapter XVI The
American immigrant experience is unique in the world in that it
involved not a leaving behind of "the old country" but an
absorption of traditions into the melting-pot culture of the New
World. This lovely 1922 novel is a reminder of how a life in
another world lingers with the settler from abroad: Journalist
Edwin Bjrkman, a Swedish emigrant to the U.S., drew on his own
childhood to create a loving portrait of a young boy's life in
Stockholm. Woven throughout the tale and limned with love are the
customs and manners of that long-ago life that have clearly been
neither forgotten or abandoned but adapted and assimilated. Sweetly
sentimental and bursting with treasured memories, this is a work to
cherish... no matter where you were born. American author EDWIN
BJRKMAN (1866-1951) wrote numerous works of translation and
literary criticism. His work appeared in, among other sources, the
journals The Reviewer and Mother Earth.
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