Original review 2004
Lightweight in style, but with some (chicken) nuggets of business observation. (I wish I'd read the warning to "Beware the good times" about this time last year!) and I'll have to remind myself to read it again if I ever think opening a restaurant is a sure fire way to make money. Aside from the business angle, this was also a solid observation of small town England at the turn of the twentieth century - the people who live and work there, the businesses that come and go, the increasing urbanization and alienation of one type of community while another grows alongside and within it. People will always be people, helping each other out and finding satisfaction in the small day to day routines that make sense of a life. And you get the impression that the author wants to return to his routine sooner rather than later in a town that McDonalds haven't got their eyes on.
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Second Reading
A second reading for this book which tells the story of opening an American style restaurant in Uckfield, and gives a snapshot of Britain and the British that continually rings true. It's the characters that frequent the diner that make the book, helping the author to suffer the other slings and arrows that outrageous fortune throws at him. If I ever think of opening a restaurant, which I occasionally daydream about, I'll pick up this book and think again!