Kerri quizzes subscribers
Kerri kicks of her Foodie Fiction Challenge | |
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Foodie Fiction Challenge |
This month, I’ve turned to a recipe from one of my all time favorite novels. The dish appears as a comforting treat when our character is at her most forlorn. She is practically alone in the world, forsaken by family and frightened for what her future holds. She turns up at a school where she is singled out for discipline. But then comes an invitation from a compassionate and kind teacher, and she arrives to find this delectable food on the table. “We feasted that evening,” this character tells us, “as on nectar and ambrosia.” Figured out who our heroine is? Here are some clues to what she was eating. This dish is made with seeds that historians believe date back to the Stone Age and are still used in many different recipes today. In this recipe, they are toasted and added to butter and sugar, eggs and flour. But this dish also features another ingredient that has a storied past, turning up in foods in ancient Mesopotamia and migrating into the cooking of French and Italian chefs. As this dish is savored in this cozy scene, our heroine’s hostess ”regarded us, as we satisfied our famished appetites on the delicate fare she liberally supplied.” So, that’s my Foodie Fiction Challenge for June. When you know who the character is and what she’s eating, tweet me: @KerriMPR.
— Kerri Miller | MPR News |
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| | Ask a Bookseller: Groundhog Day meets freshman year of college | Jenny Chou of Boswell Book Company in Milwaukee recommends the new YA novel “See You Yesterday” by Rachel Lynn Solomon, which came out May 17. Barrett Bloom is a freshman in college having a terrible day. She shows up at her Physics 101 class only to be put on the spot in front of everyone for no reason by her unbearably annoying classmate, Miles. She’s never even seen him before! Or has she? Barrett soon figures out that she and Miles are both stuck in a time loop, endlessly repeating Wednesday, Sept. 21. | |
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| | Author Marie Myung-Ok Lee on her new novel 'The Evening Hero' | As Lee tells MPR News host Kerri Miller on this week’s Big Books and Bold Ideas, “The Evening Hero” isn’t biographical, but it does mirror her own story. Lee grew up in Hibbing, Minn., watching her anesthetist father be both a community leader and an outsider. Her parents wanted to be distinctly American, but they couldn’t deny their histories and immigration journey. | |
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| | Columnist Tamar Haspel on the joy and adventure of firsthand food | Friday at 11 a.m., MPR News host Kerri Miller talked with Haspel about the grand adventure documented in her new book, “To Boldly Grow.” Filled with humor, practical advice and hard-won wisdom, both the book and the conversation will inspire a new respect for what we eat and the soil and resilience that nurture us. | |
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| | 5 books that try to help explain the unexplainable: the U.S. gun violence epidemic | | As of May 31, there have already been 233 mass shootings in 2022, according to the Gun Violence Archive, an independent organization that collects data from over 7,500 sources. On average, gun violence kills nine children every day. While these statistics are startling, they can dull the senses at the same time that solutions seem increasingly hard to come by. Here are five books that help us go beyond the numbers: telling the stories of victims of American gun violence and explaining how we got here and how we might get out. | |
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| | For 50 years, Alexander's been having terrible, horrible, no good, very bad days
| On June 1, 1972, "Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day" was first published. Written by Judith Viorst with illustrations by Ray Cruz, the bestseller has been made into a musical and a Hollywood movie. The book is so popular, Viorst's string of sad adjectives entered the vernacular; it's been used to describe lousy days, weeks and years far and wide, from political leaders to corporations. | |
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