If protagonist Billie Breslin, with the phenomenal palate, were to “taste” this novel, she would quickly identify its excess of ingredients, likely find it irreparable, and suggest starting over from scratch.
Certainly she would have done more than tweak her own character. A brilliant but reluctant cook, hiding beneath a wild hairdo, unattractive glasses, and dumpy clothes, and on a Very Big Guilt Trip, escapes her native California to seek employment in New York City at the venerable food magazine, “Delicious!” Just 21 and a college dropout, she writes well, can identify every last ingredient in any recipe (even curry leaf!), and ran a cake shop with her sister when they were mere children. She wows the magazine staff with a recipe she created at age 10 -- but only because she must cook one dish as a condition of employment -- before retreating into the “anticipatory panic” she experiences at the very thought of preparing food. Oh, and did I mention that everyone she meets in New York takes an immediate shine to her? A squadron of foodie friends to the rescue!
I picture renowned food writer and first-time novelist Ruth Reichl getting overly excited while creating “Delicious!” as she thought of more and more to stir into the pot. In addition to Billie with her talents and secrets, let’s see, we have the sudden closing of the magazine (shades of “Gourmet”), a love interest (of course), the accidental discovery of a series of letters written by a young aspiring cook to James Beard during WWII, all so very cleverly catalogued by a one-time cryptographer that finding them all becomes a huge puzzle (huh??), the ensuing search for the letter writer 60 years later ... even the Underground Railroad figures into the plot. Plus detailed descriptions of the architectural gem of a Federal mansion where the magazine’s office is housed, of a popular Italian grocery store, and naturally of countless exquisite foods.
If just reading my review makes you breathless, you’re getting a good sense of the book’s style and contents. I would have preferred some restraint.
But this may not dissuade you. Some readers will get caught up in the mysteries, the setting, the characters, and just enjoy the ride. I admit to a bit of that myself, enough for the book to eke out three stars, if just barely.