Rosa, midway
through life, is alone. Her husband passed away long ago, and her cosmopolitan
daughter is already out the door, keen to marry and move to the city. At loose
ends, Rosa decides to transplant herself to the flat, foggy Lombardy provinces
from her native Naples and there finds a way to renew herself-by opening a
restaurant, and in the process coming to a new appreciation of the myriad
relationships possible between women, from friendship to caregiving to
collaboration to emotional and physical love.
Unconventional in style and yet rivetingly
accessible, The Hunger of Women is a novel infused with the pleasures of
the body and the little shocks of daily life. Made up of Rosa's observations,
reflections, and recipes, it tracks her mental journey back to reconnect with
her own embattled mother's age-old wisdom, forward to her daughter's
inconceivable future, and laterally to the world of Rosa's new community of
lovers and customers. A tribute not only to the tradition of women's writing on
hearth and home but to the legacy of such boundary-breaking feminist writers as
Gertrude Stein, Virginia Woolf, and Helene Cixous, The Hunger of Women is
nothing less than a literary feast.
Publisher: And Other Stories
ISBN: 9781913505868
Number of pages: 256
Dimensions: 198 x 129 mm
‘Exquisitely rendered in a poetic stream-of-consciousness that brims with lush descriptions of Rosa’s recipes, Castaldi’s novel is an ode to pleasure, culinary and otherwise. Stirring and vulnerable, this is not to be missed.’ Publishers Weekly, starred review ---- 'Rosa is sick with anxiety and abandonment . . . Not uncommon if you're a widow and have an elusive daughter. To fill the void [Rosa] begins to cook all sorts of dishes . . . Flavours meant to be handed down from mothers to daughters and which can be shared only with other women, grandiose in their fragility. The Neapolitan-Milanese Castaldi does not use punctuation, lets thought flow unchained, because life flows like water, and the search for one's identity, always painful, always exhausting, manifests even in our food, the passions in our mouths and hearts.' Rolling Stone (Italy) ---- 'Marosia Castaldi's project would seem to be precisely that of revealing the wealth that resides in a woman's domestic microcosm, and the wisdom and passions that can be read among the ingredients of her kitchen.' Lorenzo Licciardi, Roma Cultura ---- 'A hypnotic theatre of cruelty and tenderness in which the protagonist and narrator Rosa and her friends make vacuum cleaners buzz, exhibit the most lavish forms of desire, desire each other, and desperately, and above all make food, the food which is really the nourishment of the book itself, an obsession formalized here in something like a hundred recipes spread over just under two hundred pages.' Francesco Durante, Corriere del Mezzogiorno
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