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Crédit image: By Works Progress Administration, artist unknown - National Archives and Records Administration, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=62418412

Œuvres de WPA

The WPA Oklahoma Slave Narratives (1941) 30 exemplaires
Florida Slave Narratives (1941) 14 exemplaires
Slave Narratives: GEORGIA VOL 4 (1941) 5 exemplaires
Slave Narratives: ARKANSAS VOL 3 (1941) 4 exemplaires
Augusta-Hallowell on the Kennebec (1940) 3 exemplaires
Trains Going By 2 exemplaires
A Guide to Key West (1949) 1 exemplaire
American Wild Life Illustrated (1947) 1 exemplaire
Slave Narratives Vol. XIV (2016) 1 exemplaire
American Wild Life Illustrated (1949) 1 exemplaire
Timberline Lodge 1 exemplaire
Ghost Towns of Colorado (1947) 1 exemplaire
These Are Our Lives (1939) 1 exemplaire
American Wildlife Illustrated. (1940) 1 exemplaire
Cincinnati 1788-1943 (1987) 1 exemplaire
Nebraska Folklore (Book Three) (1941) 1 exemplaire
Wpa (2009) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

New York: A Guide to the Empire State (1940)quelques éditions48 exemplaires

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This book is an excellent social history of the eating and cooking habits of America in the period before and including the 1930s. Kurlansky didn't write this, he edited the raw manuscripts from the 1940 Federal Writers' Project of the WPA, rescued these essays, recipes, and poems on food, cooking, and eating, from their Library of Congress oblivion, and wrote the introductory material.

While the social history aspect is fascinating (there is not even a mention of wine until you get to the Southwest and the Mexican/Spanish population -- almost all of America drank coffee with all their meals), after getting the gist of it, I found the recipes and descriptions of the food somewhat boring.

The US has had, and in fact, among many people, still has the reputation for being a country that has no cuisine and that doesn't know how to cook -- a country that eats hot dogs and hamburgers, and maybe some pie that is worth notice. And the truth is, this book, doesn't dispel that myth to any great degree. If people were eating and cooking the way described by the WPA writers (and there is no reason to believe they were not) than it's a good thing Julia Child came back from Europe to save the country.

… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
dvoratreis | 26 autres critiques | May 22, 2024 |
3.5 An enjoyable, if uneven, collection. This is a book culled, not made, so difficult to review comprehensively. Considerably redundant and more recipe based than was necessary. Worth it for sheer variance and moments of joy.
 
Signalé
Eoin | 26 autres critiques | Jun 3, 2019 |
This was more of a 2 1/2 - some bits were interesting, but there's only so many meat barbecues I'm interested in reading about. Also the library wanted it back - I mostly skimmed the last 1/2 of it. There were some interesting stories about native American foods. The whole time capsule feel of some of the pieces was fascinating, but somehow it came across more as a pile of essays rather than something that hung together.
 
Signalé
cindywho | 26 autres critiques | May 27, 2019 |
 
Signalé
OCARCHIVES | Dec 28, 2018 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
257
Aussi par
1
Membres
1,269
Popularité
#20,211
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
31
ISBN
51
Langues
1

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