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The Heart-Shaped Tin: Love, Loss and Kitchen Objects: Love, Loss and Kitchen Objects

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A strikingly original account from award-winning food writer Bee Wilson, charting how everyday objects take on deeply personal meanings in all our lives.

One ordinary day, out of the blue, the heart-shaped tin in which Bee Wilson baked her wedding cake falls to the ground. This should have been unremarkable, except that two months earlier her husband left her for another woman.

In a search of others who had also invested kitchen objects with strong meanings and emotions, Wilson found that this way of thinking might be the rule rather than the exception. Even those who believe they’re not at all sentimental might have a weak spot – a grandmother’s wooden spoon or a salt shaker inherited from a parent.

In a late-capitalist world flooded with so much clutter, what to keep and what to let go becomes an overwhelmingly existential question. We hold on to seemingly useless things because of the feelings they inspire, and every time we let go of a cherished object there is a sense of loss. These items, Wilson argues, become powerful symbols of identity and memory, representing everything from friendship, grief and love to superstition, safety and political resistance.

Crossing continents, cultures and time periods, Wilson weaves her own intimate experiences into a wider narrative that reaches back to the earliest human civilisations. Thoughtful, sharp and beautifully written, The Heart-Shaped Tin is a profoundly moving examination of our relationship to the physical world – and the people around us – in an increasingly rational and secular age.

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Published May 8, 2025

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About the author

Bee Wilson

32 books265 followers
Bee Wilson is the author of books about food, approaching the subject from a number of different angles.

As well as a cookbook (The Secret of Cooking), she has written books on food and history (Consider the Fork), food and psychology (First Bite), and the emotional life of kitchen objects (The Heart-Shaped Tin: Love, Loss and Kitchen Objects).


Wilson's book The Way We Eat Now was awarded the Fortnum & Mason Food Book of the year in 2020.

Wilson's cookbook The Secret of Cooking was listed as one of The New Yorker's Fifteen Essential Cookbooks as well as a New York Times, WBUR Here & Now, and National Post Best Cookbook of 2023 and one of the Guardian's Five Best Food Books of 2023

In 2025 she was awarded an M.B.E. for services to food writing and food education (the educstion part was for her work in co-founding and creating TastEd, a charity in the U.K. aimed at introducing children to the joys of vegetables and fruits using their senses.



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Displaying 1 - 30 of 53 reviews
Profile Image for Rosa Opie.
31 reviews8 followers
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September 25, 2025
Sentimentality manages to creep its way into all corners of my life. I love an heirloom, an artefact, a random and clearly well-loved op-shop find. I hold onto scraps: tickets from theatre shows and film screenings, silly little notes that my friends have written to cheer me up, and worn out clothes that I hope I’ll find the find the time and energy to metamorphose so I can carry around the memories woven into the fabric in a new way.

In The Heart-Shaped Tin, Bee Wilson celebrates the stories of items that often get overlooked or shoved to the back of the cupboard: a washing-up bowl, a salt shaker, a toast rack. Through a series of essays she creates an experience that I can only describe as a blend of a niche anthropology class and sitting with someone as they sift through a memory box and share the stories of each item with you. She positions these kitchen items as talismans of complicated human emotion: happiness, heartbreak, grief, superstition, nightmarish levels of nostalgia, and the simultaneous permanence and impermanence of them all. I loved and learned a lot from every little essay.

Material culture is magical! Everything has a story worth telling and I find that so, so enthralling.

Profile Image for The Bookish Elf.
2,893 reviews452 followers
May 20, 2025
In her latest work, food writer Bee Wilson crafts a remarkable memoir-essay hybrid that transforms everyday kitchen objects into profound repositories of human experience. The Heart-Shaped Tin begins with a jarring moment: months after her husband's sudden departure, a heart-shaped cake tin—the same one she used for their wedding cake twenty-three years earlier—falls at her feet. This incident becomes the catalyst for a deeply personal yet universally resonant exploration of how the most mundane kitchen tools become vessels for our most intimate emotions.

Wilson, whose previous works include Consider the Fork and First Bite, has long explored our relationship with food. Here, she shifts her gaze to the objects that help us prepare it, examining how they become extensions of ourselves, symbols of our relationships, and archives of our memories. The result is a book that manages to be simultaneously scholarly and intimate, cerebral and deeply moving.

A Global Tapestry of Kitchen Treasures

What makes Wilson's approach so compelling is her ability to weave her personal narrative into a broader tapestry that spans continents and centuries. She introduces us to:

- Roopa Gulati, who overcomes her fear of breaking her parents' treasured Braemar china after her husband's devastating diagnosis

- Jacob Chaim, who crafted a secret spoon from scrap metal while imprisoned in a Nazi labor camp

- A Ukrainian kitchen cabinet that survived a Russian bombing and became a symbol of resistance

- Dave, an enslaved potter who signed defiant poems onto his stoneware jars

- A 5,000-year-old Ecuadorian chocolate bottle decorated with a man's face

Wilson deftly moves between these stories and dozens more, demonstrating how kitchen objects become totems of identity, resilience, and love across cultures and throughout history. She draws on anthropology, psychology, and material culture studies to explore why these objects hold such power, citing Marcel Mauss's theories on gift-giving and Paul Rozin's studies on magical thinking and contagion.

Emotional Archaeology Through Objects

The most affecting moments in the book come when Wilson examines her own relationship with kitchen objects, using them as an emotional archaeology of her life. She writes with remarkable vulnerability about:

- Her mother's cream-colored AGA cooker, purchased as dementia began to erode her memory
- A silver-plated toast rack her mother believed had been stolen
- Her ex-husband's favorite iron knife for cutting homemade pizza
- The kitchen table where her family gathered for years, the corner where he always sat now painfully empty
- A Japanese kintsugi workshop where she learns to repair broken cups with gold as a metaphor for mending after heartbreak

Wilson's prose is precise yet lyrical, analytical but deeply felt. She observes her own behavior with the same scholarly curiosity she applies to historical and anthropological examples, noting how she began to see many kitchen items as "cursed" following her separation—a phenomenon she later connects to universal human tendencies toward magical thinking.

Strengths and Insights

The book's greatest strength lies in Wilson's ability to balance intellectual rigor with emotional honesty. She never romanticizes objects or oversimplifies their meanings. Instead, she acknowledges their complexity:

"The meaning of objects is never fixed; it can change in a heartbeat. And this is just as well. In a world of finite and dwindling resources, our ability to change the meaning of the material goods in our environment is one of the greatest powers we have."

Wilson is particularly insightful about how kitchen objects mediate our relationships with others. A red washing-up bowl gifted by a neighbor becomes a profound gesture of support during divorce. An oil dispenser from a new love interest transforms her perception of an item she once dismissed as unnecessary. These examples demonstrate how objects facilitate connection when words fail.

The book also offers a thoughtful examination of consumption and waste. Wilson contrasts the Japanese principle of mottainai (avoiding waste) with Western throwaway culture, suggesting that treating objects with reverence might lead to more sustainable ways of living.

Some Structural Considerations

At times, the book's organization feels somewhat arbitrary, with chapters grouped into thematic sections ("Charms," "Mementos," "Junk," etc.) that occasionally overlap. Some readers might wish for a more chronological structure to Wilson's personal narrative, which jumps back and forth throughout the book.

Additionally, while Wilson's research is impressive, a few sections delve so deeply into historical or anthropological detail that they temporarily lose the emotional thread that makes the book so compelling. Her exploration of Elizabethan sieves and Cameroon drinking horns, while fascinating, occasionally pulls focus from the more intimate aspects of her story.

A Reflection on Modern Materialism

What distinguishes The Heart-Shaped Tin from other memoirs about grief and healing is its focus on our relationship with material culture. Wilson writes:

"In a world flooded with cheap material goods, you do not have to be extravagant to end up with what feels like vastly too much stuff."

Yet she doesn't simply advocate minimalism. Instead, she suggests that we might develop more meaningful relationships with fewer things—that objects can serve as bridges to our past and anchors in uncertain times, but only if we recognize their symbolic weight.

This is particularly poignant in her reflections on her mother's dementia, where objects like blue and white plates become final connections to a person whose memories were fading. "A plate is something to hold onto when hands are gone," she writes in one of the book's most affecting lines.

Final Assessment: Transformative and Timely

The Heart-Shaped Tin succeeds brilliantly as both a personal memoir and a cultural examination. Wilson transforms ordinary kitchen implements into profound symbols without ever becoming precious or sentimental. Instead, she illuminates how the most mundane objects can become extraordinary through the meanings we assign them.

By the book's end, Wilson has come full circle. She reclaims the heart-shaped tin to bake a birthday cake, transforming an object associated with loss into one that celebrates continuing life. This act encapsulates the book's central wisdom—that objects have no fixed meaning beyond what we assign them, and that this flexibility offers profound possibilities for healing and renewal.
Profile Image for Joanne.
1,546 reviews47 followers
July 20, 2025
Such an interesting book. Brought back a lot of memories and could relate to many of the reasons why people feel attached to certain kitchen items. Had a wonderful and emotional discussion about the book and things important to us at my book group. 💜
Profile Image for CatReader.
1,067 reviews196 followers
January 11, 2026
Bee Wilson is an English writer who's written a number of excellent books about culinary history and practices around the world; I gave rare 5 stars to two of her previous books, 2015's First Bite: How We Learn to Eat and 2019's The Way We Eat Now: Strategies for Eating in a World of Change. While I resonated with the curiosity and outward-facing scope of those two prior books, her 2025 book The Heart-Shaped Tin is decidedly more introspective - I'd consider it largely a memoir of the last few, turbulent years of Wilson's life, with external anecdotes sprinkled throughout, some more cohesively than others. While I enjoyed this read (I listened to the audiobook pleasantly narrated by Wilson), it did feel quite uneven overall.

The titular heart-shaped tin that started Wilson's writing process was a cake tin she used to bake her own wedding cake, which she rediscovered after her husband of nearly two decades abruptly walked out on her to marry someone else. This led to Wilson taking a deep dive into kitchen possessions for which that people hold sentimental attachment, leading her to interview an eclectic variety of folks who do or don't feel this way, or who hoard, or who randomly collect dozens of a certain kitchen item, or who have strong feelings (positive or negative) about the 1970s-1980s Sears Merry Mushroom kitchenware collection (which I, born in the late 80s, was blissfully unaware of until today and find not suited to my taste, though to each their own). This part of the book felt quite random and sometimes disjointed to me, sort of like a mini-The Memory Palace: True Short Stories of the Past loosely centered around kitchenware. The most fascinating story in this part of the book for me was learning about David Drake, a Black American potter who was born enslaved but died free and wrote sometimes poignant, sometimes humorous inscriptions into his pottery.

I had mixed feelings about the memoiristic elements of the book. The main themes were around Wilson's recent divorce and the gradual decline and death of her mother from dementia, with many anecdotes about cooking and kitchenware around both events. My overall impression is that both events are very recent and still quite raw for Wilson, and with more time and distance they'll become less intensely emotional and lend to a more cohesive narrative.

My statistics:
Book 10 for 2026
Book 2316 cumulatively
Profile Image for Maria.
170 reviews
June 25, 2025
This was a lovely book to read and it really made me think about the relationship between memories, objects and the value we place in the mundane little things when they are related to the great loves in our lives. This was a really engaging and well written book that I wanted to keep picking up.
Profile Image for Debbi.
471 reviews119 followers
September 11, 2025

Bee Wilson braids memoir, the history of objects and philosophy in this wonderful book. I enjoyed the book the most when the author shared her own personal stories and her love of particular kitchen objects. The heart shaped tin holds the memory of a marriage that ended suddenly, a melon baller an object that captivated her young sons, a toast rack that was loved by her mother who slipped into dementia. Many objects are explored, some more interesting than others. A spoon created in a Nazi camp, yes. Paper cups not as much.
Each chapter opens with a quote, then a story and is often followed by the history of the object. The research is excellent.
The quote that best characterizes the book for me is "Strange the affection which clings to inanimate objects---- Objects which cannot even know our love."
As I thought about the objects I love and what they mean to me I found myself opening conversations with others on this subject. Excellent table talk.
Many thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for an ARC to read and review.
52 reviews1 follower
January 4, 2026
Her husband left her and the heart shaped tin she used to make her wedding cake is a trigger so she thought to write a book about sentimental items in the kitchen. It was mostly boring. The fascinating parts for me was 1) that her grand father worked as a potter & she discussed his design & glazes and 2) she delves in into ‘Dave the potter’, a slave potter in the 1800’s whose pottery is most prized (auctioned at over $1,000,000, not only were the vessels very large, the would inscribe poetry on it as well. I was happy to read at the end that she’s moving forward & found her special someone, the musician that got her the oil bottle.
Profile Image for Jenifer Jacobs.
1,217 reviews27 followers
January 21, 2026
A nonfiction blend of memoir and research. Very interesting at times!
Profile Image for Tebafin.
475 reviews21 followers
January 24, 2026
This book hit home as I have been cleaning out my own mother’s home. Strange how things spark so much emotion.
Profile Image for Sara.
38 reviews1 follower
May 27, 2025
4.5 stars rounded up to 5 stars
Profile Image for Enchanted Prose.
338 reviews23 followers
November 13, 2025
Why it’s so hard to part with certain things (from a Cambridge, UK kitchen to around the world): Are you emotionally attached to particular objects in your kitchen? You’re not alone.

The Heart-Shaped Tin: Love, Loss, and Kitchen Objects comes out at a time when Americans will gather to remember and give thanks to family and friends by preparing a feast for many or a few. Aside from the US tradition, this gem resonates universally. Affecting and enlightening, a hybrid memoir that pays tribute to saving objects, reminding us of the past. A manifesto against minimalism.

In all likelihood, you know why the object in question means so much to you. Bee Wilson – British cookbook/food writer, food education activist, journalist, and broadcaster – goes further than the personal looking further for answers and explanations.

In her newest book, the writer/researcher examines what others have to say about the meaning of specific kitchen memorabilia, especially vintage and antique. Her knowledge, passion, curiosity extends eclectically to historians, archaeologists, psychologists, writers, philosophers, tableware designers, consumer and social scientists. Friends too, especially to discover cultural significance.

Starting from the premise of having “long felt that kitchen objects can have a life of their own,” Wilson engages us with an assortment of kitchen items she categorizes as Charms, Mementos, Junk, Tools, Symbols, Gifts, and Treasure. Then breaks these down into chapters named for the object featured, ending with roughly twenty pages of “Background Reading” citing her source materials.

Once you read the preface’s explanation of the emotions that triggered this book, you’ll be won over. The catalyst was an incident in 2020 when a rusted, twenty-three-year-old “giant metal heart” fell onto her kitchen floor. The “loud clang” set off wistful and painful memories of the first time she used the tin: to bake her wedding cake. Your initial reaction might be, who bakes their own wedding cake? Then it hits you: a bona fide cook who thrives on creating in her kitchen. The timing rattled her. Two months after her husband of twenty-three years walked out on her, throwing her for an emotional loop. So fresh, raw, piercing.

Nevertheless, Wilson had a keen presence of mind to think more broadly. What kind of omen was that? Symbolic of what? Did others feel like her? She wanted answers to better explain and validate the intensity of her feelings. Surely she understood the tin signified a love that had grown apart, but that wasn’t enough.

Those questions and approach separate this memoir from others. Resulting in learning something new in each of the stories. Some are unforgettable tales of bravery. A good place to share a few.

Two wartime objects deliver ample evidence on how emotionally charged and existential kitchen objects can become. The first, a window into what’s happening right now as Ukrainian homes continue to be bombed. Wilson’s writing is vivid, often augmented (twenty-five times) with a B/W illustration of the object. The “Ukrainian Kitchen Cabinet” miraculously still hangs on a kitchen wall in a gutted apartment building. Even the kitchen plates left untouched, seen neatly stacked inside the cabinet. A “valiant” symbol of “the brave Ukrainians who chose to stay in Kyiv despite the war.” Cherishing objects “almost became sacred.” A battle cry to save the “old Ukraine.” A penetrating story about the price of freedom, democracy, independence.

“Jacob’s Spoon” echoes those sacrifices, values, and principles, with a Holocaust story that conveys the ultimate sacrifice for dignity, humanity. Wilson couldn’t have said it better: “This is the single most eloquent story I’ve come across about the power of utensils to give meaning to life,” emphasizing that of all the kitchen utensils a spoon is “the most peaceful.” (See: The Rituals of Dinner, Margaret Visser’s 1991 book). Up against the inhumanity Jacob was subjected to as a Polish prisoner at the “hellish” Dora-Mittelbau labor camp, once a “subcamp of the notorious Buchenwald” concentration camp, he endured barbaric days underground in tunnels forced to make “weapons for the Nazis.” Jacob Chaim risked his life to steal a piece of tin, then risked it over and over again to shape the metal into a spoon since no utensils were supplied to slurp up the scanty grub. Under these perilous conditions, any spoon would have been remarkable. This one, though, noted for its “beauty and craftsmanship.” Preserved and treasured at Montreal’s Holocaust Museum.

While other kitchen tales are lighter-hearted, they’re also revealing. “Happy Hands” is a warm nickname name for a 1940s “stainless-steel salad tongs with a pair of cupped hands on the end” belonged to the mother of “one of the greatest pie experts in America,” Kate McDermott. This memento meant so much to Kate’s mother that before she passed away she asked that it be saved. “So playful and whimsical” Kate points out compared to the “dull and utilitarian” kitchen products manufactured during WWII.

“The Rotary Whisk” may look dull and utilitarian to us but it’s “an artifact mystically quickened with sentiment,” says Wright Morris in his 1989 book, Time Pierces: Photographs, Writing and Memory.

Cultural diversity takes us back centuries. To a 5,000-year-old ceramic “Chocolate Bottle” from Ecuador excavated in 2003. Wilson doesn’t own it, but has seen its “breathtaking sophistication” in photographs, one included. The “intricate” object amazes her as it looks like something Picasso might have created in the thirties. A man’s face appears at the bottom of the container, front and back, giving two different impressions: mad and happy. “Eloquent proof, from the earliest of civilizations, culinary objects have been treated as vessels for human emotions as well as foods,” Wilson writes of these “potent carriers of feeling.”

She goes on to explore other ideas around the charmed object/subject (as she does with all the others). “Why Are Pots Decorated?” is a question that comes from a 1988 article by a team of archaeologists, which leads to wondering what was so special about chocolate to Ecuadorians and to the “Mayans of Mesoamerica” (the Indigenous peoples of Mexico and Central America)?

The importance of rice in India’s culture is seen through a surprisingly effective, “flimsy,” aluminum pot for cooking rice essential to the dishes of the family of her friend Subha Mukherji who grew up in Kolkata, India. Today Professor of Early Modern Literature and Culture at the University of Cambridge in England, “Subha’s Rice Pan” is simple, well-used, and makes “perfect fluffy white rice.” Who needs the complicated rice cookers on the market today? The rice pot is wonderfully nostalgic as it “can act as comforting,” particularly when associated with a time when there was more “certainty.”

The Japanese no-waste culture is understood through “Broken Pots” and the ancient “art of mending” called “kintsugi.” A sacred concept that takes us back to the 1500s to the present-day: broken is better, so we shouldn’t hide it. It’s also psychological, implying, “Embrace your imperfections and find happiness.” Wilson goes on to explain the idea in Zen Buddhist terms referred to as “wabi or wabi-sabi,” spiritual and philosophical beliefs in the “ephemerality of life and an acceptance that everything is imperfect and transient.”

The emotional depth connected to these kitchen stories offers a new perspective on healing broken and sentimental hearts. As imperfect as that is.
Profile Image for Alicia.
8,595 reviews151 followers
November 23, 2025
I am biased and I know it because Wilson is one of my favorite writers of food/nonfiction. I've been waiting a year for this to pub in the United States and decided to slowly read the chapters rather than blow through it because I adored it. I wanted to savor it like it's evident she savors the stories she collects from others about what kitchen objects meant to them and exploring why. And I decided to read it with a cup of tea to finish it on my birthday as an extra special treat.

Threaded throughout the stories is her own story of a divorce and the heart-shaped tin she baked their wedding cake in that she discovered a few months after the divorce. There's also quite a bit about her mother who ended up in a care facility before her death. The one oddity is that several of the chapters are written in second person while most others are written in the first person-- the curator and collector of stories around the world about their kitchen objects.

Favorite stories/essays include "The Ukrainian Kitchen Cabinet" that starts with Belk's quote from 1988 "The house is a symbolic body for the family." "Objects can't have feelings- of course they can't. But if ever there was a tenacious and brave kitchen cabinet, it was the one that clung to the side of a building for dear life in Ukraine in the spring of 2022, oblivious to the Russian bombardment. 'Be strong like this kitchen cabinet' was a meme which went viral on social media in April 2022, a little over a month into the Russian invasion.... The idea of an indestructible everyday object is a powerful symbol, especially in the context of a war which stripped millions of people of their kitchens and homes... noticed that an increasing number of Ukrainians seemed to be taking comfort in 'material objects that stubbornly persist.'"

"One of the differences between an object and a living being is that the object never changes. While generations of humans live and die, it remains its own constant self. An object may rust of crumble or fade in the dishwasher or get smashed, but it can never change in fundamental personality. This is its limitation but also its power... psychologist Robert Romanyshyn writes of the 'dumb faithfulness' of things, a great phrase which explains the succor so many of us derive from our old trusted possessions."

"The ideal life involves a balance between keeping and discarding, just as it involves a balance between remembering and forgetting. But where do we draw the line? We keep mementos to remind us who we are, in the same way that we desperately try to ward off the loss of memory itself."

"Long after he discarded the past bowl, Barry says that there are still certain objects that bring back periods of his life in a way that nothing else could. They are not museum pieces. Over and above admiring, they are for using, and when he uses them his memories come alive again, he says... He could not bear to lose this mug because it 'radiates' with such memorable experiences. When the mug is not in use, Barry says it is as if the memories of that Mexican trip become 'dehydrated,' like a dried flower. But when he pours coffee in it and holds the mug in his hang, 'it blooms again.'"

"You buy these small treasures, hoping they will come in handy. You save them for something special. And then you die before the special event happens and they never get used. It's like the fine vintage wine that people keep stored away for the moment that never quite comes. My uncle, my mother's brother, loved champagne but usually felt that not enough people were present to justify opening it. He once uttered the words, 'Are we quorate for champagne?' as if it were a meeting. He died a year and half after my mother and one of my first thoughts was that I wished he had seized the day and drunk more champagne."

"The problem of unwanted presents is probably nowhere greater than in Japan, which has a culture of gift-giving more extensive than any other advanced capitalist society. Life-cycle events such as births, weddings, and funerals comes with an expectation not just that the guests should give a gift but that the recipients should immediately reciprocate with a return-gift (oiwai no okaeshi) often a household item such as a set of glasses or towels, which may be roughly half the value of the original offering, although somethings the return-gift is worth even more than the original, which increases the general sense of gifting escalation out of control... The endless exchange of goods in Japan means that many people have houses cluttered with superfluous items which they would dearly love to dispose of but feel they can't. For this reason, many people in Japan prefer to give and receive perishable foodstuffs- premium treats such as perfect melons or luxury seafood because one they are eaten they are gone."

Susan Sontag, 1977 "Fewer and fewer Americans possess objects that have a patina, old furniture, grandparents' pots and pans- the used things, warm with generations of human touch, essential to a human landscape."

"A Norwegian scientist of smell and memory called Trygg Engen once said that our sense of smell (and, by implication flavour) is a system 'designed not to forget."
Profile Image for Claire Nabiwande.
8 reviews1 follower
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November 20, 2025
Heart-Shaped Tin is one of those books that sneaks up on you quietly and then settles into your mind long after you stop reading. Bee Wilson has always had a gift for weaving memory, food, and emotion together, but here she does it with an intimacy that feels almost confessional. The book isn’t just about recipes or nostalgia; it’s about how the smallest objects—the tins, jars, and scraps of stored-away food memories—carry our hidden stories.

From the very first chapter, I felt the gentle pull of Wilson’s voice. She writes with such tenderness, almost as if she’s describing the emotional fingerprints left on everyday things. The heart-shaped tin itself becomes a symbol for all the love, longing, and loss that we fold into food without even realizing it. I kept pausing to think: yes, I’ve felt that too. That’s the power of this book—it doesn’t shout; it resonates.

What stood out most to me is how Wilson connects the personal with the universal. She slips between her own memories and wider cultural reflections so naturally that you don’t feel the shift; you just follow. There’s a quiet honesty in the way she explores the complicated relationships we have with food—how it can comfort us, hold us, disappoint us, or remind us of someone we don’t have anymore. At times it felt like she was giving language to feelings most of us carry but rarely try to explain.

The book is full of small, vivid moments: childhood lunches, kitchen rituals, the strange intimacy of sharing a meal with someone you love, or even someone you’ve lost. Wilson captures these scenes with such care that you can almost smell the kitchens and hear the echo of those rooms. She isn’t dramatic—just observant. And sometimes that simplicity hits the hardest.

What I also appreciated is that Heart-Shaped Tin doesn’t pretend everything about food or memory is pretty. Wilson acknowledges the complicated side—guilt, pressure, nostalgia that hurts, and even the way certain tastes can bring back memories you’d rather forget. But she handles it gently, like someone turning over a delicate object in their hands, trying to understand rather than judge.

By the end, I felt both full and strangely lighter. It’s the kind of book that makes you want to go look through your own cupboards or drawers and think about why certain objects matter to you. It reminded me that emotional history isn’t always written in big events—sometimes it’s tucked inside a tin that once held biscuits or sweets, saved long after the contents were gone.
Profile Image for Grace.
Author 22 books4 followers
September 14, 2025
I’d not heard of Bee Wilson until my mum recommended this book. It’s right up my street - I’m a design historian so I’ve spent my career writing about what objects mean, and I like cooking too. So I really wanted to enjoy it and I did so across many of the chapters, but I have to say this book is variable in quality. Some chapters are really wonderful, while others, e.g. the melon baller, are tedious. I think this is because Wilson focuses on her personal relationships so heavily. While it is amazing that the book was prompted by Wilson’s heart-shaped wedding cake tin falling out of its storage place at the time of her divorce, I am not at all interested in how her sons argued over a melon baller. That is meaningful for Wilson, but not for me and however emotively Wilson writes about it, the topic does not achieve greater significance than a cute family memory. And while it is amazing that Wilson inadvertently bought a teapot that, it turned out, her grandfather had designed for Wedgwood, the chapter about her mother’s cream Aga - something she was too much afflicted by dementia to ever really use even though it will have cost c. £4000 - is tainted with middle-class privilege and self-indulgence. Not all of the content relates to Wilson’s family history. Much of the book reports on primary research interviewing her friends, and secondary research for context. I enjoyed Wilson’s accounts of the Ukrainian kitchen cabinet and Sears’ mushroom canisters and her friend’s happy hands serving tool, among other examples. I think it is heartening that so many readers are enthusiastic about Wilson’s account of how kitchen objects matter. But as a design historian - not part of the intended readership for the book, I accept - I found the secondary sources extremely familiar, and I wondered about what Wilson understood other objects to mean. She doesn’t reflect on the fact that all objects carry meanings, not only kitchen objects. If she thinks kitchen objects are special she should make the case. In the meantime, I’ll await her next book, the heart-shaped rug, or the heart-shaped car, or the heart-shaped park, or the heart-shaped timetable, with interest.
Profile Image for Bonny.
1,022 reviews25 followers
November 13, 2025
The Heart-Shaped Tin is a warm, contemplative blend of memoir and cultural history, and Bee Wilson shows her gift for uncovering the emotional lives of everyday objects and the people attached to them. The book begins with a quietly devastating moment: several months after Wilson’s husband abruptly walked away from their marriage, she stumbled upon the heart-shaped tin she had used to bake their wedding cake twenty-three years earlier. That discovery becomes the emotional spark for a book that manages to balance a scholar’s curiosity with a memoirist’s vulnerability, offering a reading experience that is both intellectual and profoundly heartfelt.

The author moves gracefully between her own post-marriage reflections and the stories of others whose wooden spoons, saltshakers, toast racks, and tongs become touchstones for grief, comfort, creativity, and connection. Some of the most memorable sections are the deep dives into objects with long histories: the 5,000-year-old Ecuadorian chocolate vessel, the stoneware inscribed with defiant poems by an enslaved potter, the ceremonial tools, the heirlooms passed down through families. These moments broaden the book’s scope beyond personal storytelling and remind the reader just how universal these attachments are.

What kept this from being a five-star read for me is also part of its charm: the book meanders. While Wilson’s writing is consistently sharp and lovely, the structure can feel a bit diffuse, and some chapters linger longer than they need to. Still, the overall effect is soothing, curious, and unexpectedly moving.

If you enjoy reflective nonfiction, especially books that blend history, anthropology, and personal narrative, The Heart-Shaped Tin is a rewarding, empathetic read. The author has written a wide-ranging exploration of how kitchen tools hold memory, identity, and sometimes even a kind of quiet magic. It’s a reminder that the mundane objects we reach for every day often hold our most intimate stories.
Profile Image for Dorothy MacKeen.
12 reviews2 followers
October 19, 2025
"The things we surround ourselves with give meaning to our lives." And for Bee Wilson, who has written several food related books, those things are kitchen objects - the things we use to make food, serve food and eat food. Given the importance of food in our lives - love, comfort, celebration, solace - it isn’t surprising that for many people it is food-related objects that call forth their memories. The author begins with a story at the end of her marriage. She writes about the devastation she feels in finding the heart-shaped tin that that she used to make her wedding cake, but she looks not only at the objects that have meaning for her as she works through the divorce, the loss of her mother, her children growing and leaving and the beginning of a new relationship but at how objects have been important to others. These objects range from a tomato-shaped salt shaker to an oil dispenser to mushroom canisters and often have little intrinsic value but the emotions they call forth are immense. The book is divided into sections - charms, mementos, junk, tools, symbols, gifts, and treasures. It covers topics as diverse as the discovery of an old cocoa jug that changed the history of chocolate to a tin spoon secretly created in a prison camp, and a portrait of Queen Elizabeth I holding a sieve. She looks at the poetry pottery of a slave named David Drake (which is now in museums) and at the budare pan brought out from Venezuela when her friend left for a new life in Spain. You will learn about burial plates and glory boxes and the importance of Aga's. In sharing the memories of people, she also gives you history and background so that you read about not only David Drake’s incredible pottery but about his life as a slave. This isn't a read-it -straight- through book - it's a pick up and read an essay with a cup of tea and a tasty cookie. Much enjoyed.
(NOTE: I received an ARC to allow a review of this book)
Profile Image for Sharon.
66 reviews1 follower
August 30, 2025
I was surprised by The Heart-Shaped Tin. I was expecting a light-hearted collection of stories about objects that people held dear due to their connection to a memory, a feeling, a person, or an event. The book provides that, but interspersed is quite a bit of information about why the value and meaning we assign to certain objects occupy a particular place in a person's mind, heart, or life. Bee Wilson clearly did a lot of research as she wrote this book. Each vignette is full of quotes and references to important works in the areas of psychology, semiotics and linguistics, education, language and meaning, and social and cultural mores. I loved the references to Mikhal Csikszentmihalyi's work, which I've studied and admire. the story about The Settlement Cook Book brought me to tears because my grandmother owned a copy (published in 1936); the cookbook is mine now and I cherish the notes and recipes she tucked into it.

I enjoyed Ms. Wilson's description of her journey through her recovery from the pain of familial and marital loss. The full circle moment with the heart-shaped tin was a beautiful story. Despite how much I enjoyed this book, I found that at times it didn't seem clear about whether it was a book of research or a book of stories. It made it a little less of an enjoyable read, and more of something I would want to pick up to read a single vignette, or look up something, rather than something I want to sit down to read as I would a novel or book of short-stories. I'm rating it a 3.5 but rounding up to a 4 since I admire the work that went it the research and writing, as well as the personal journey of the author.

My thanks to NetGalley and W. W. Norton & Company for the complimentary ARC of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own
1,101 reviews11 followers
December 21, 2025
Bee Wilson, a food writer, shares her memoir about kitchen items. The things we might use everyday that hold special places in our hearts, or take us back to another time. We might misplace, store or sometimes lose these items and then suddenly, there they are, hiding in the back of a cupboard. For Wilson, her marriage had ended somewhat abruptly and she was learning how to be a single person/parent when she discovers the heart-shaped tin she used to bake the wedding cake. It brings back a rush of memories. As she thinks about the significance of these household items, she realizes they hold an important place in our memories.

Each chapter starts with a quotation, and a history of a particular item, a toast rack owned by her mother and thought to be stolen many years ago, the AGA stove her mother bought as dementia sets in, a spoon carved by a prisoner of the Nazis. She tells of a chocolate pot created many years ago in South America. I sometimes found the history to be somewhat overlong and it diluted the emotional impact of these objects. Overall, an interesting book, and it will make each of look at the objects in our kitchens/houses with an open mind.

I received an ARC from NetGalley and W.W. Norton and Company, in exchange for a review.
1,829 reviews35 followers
November 11, 2025
The Heart-Shaped Tin melted and broke my heart in all the right ways. Author Bee Wilson writes about the objects we find in our kitchens because they belong in that room, belong in our hearts or both. We often associate kitchens with the heartbeat of the home. When we acquire objects, we cannot possibly know the effects they may have on us or others until they do. Objects can be beautiful or ugly or both. But they are links to memories good and bad, superstitions, legacy of rationing, political resistance, and traditions. These powerful symbols evoke such emotion that we weep with joy or anger when we see them or smile when we touch them. Some detailed include a toast rack, rolling pin, oil dispenser, Happy Hands tongs, Jacob's spoon, melon baller and mushroom canisters (photos included!). Without knowing more, they may seem ordinary, but that couldn't be further from the truth. Each story is poignant and each object a powerful lesson.

The author's heart-shaped baking tin falling months after the abrupt end to her marriage was a turning point in her life. It represents so much of her married past with her former husband and the present and future with her kids. I love that in her grief she came up with novel ways for creating new memories in her kitchen such as tiny wedding ring croutons.

Other riveting topics in this book include exploring the reasons we treat inanimate objects the way we do, the importance of mementos, why we don't use objects as we should (such as precious plates), unwanted gifts, objects of action versus objects of contemplation, hoarding, "dumb faithfulness", vintage kitchenalia, and the art of kintsugi.

This book has it all and then some. If only I could convey the depth of emotions I felt while reading this. Not only is the thoughtful contemplation wonderful but so are the stories behind the emotions. My eyes welled up, my mind happily learned new things, my curiosity was piqued and satiated, and my heart sang. My own kitchen treasures are many and include the hideous ceramic candy bowl I made for my mom in kindergarten which she displayed with pride for years. Another is a delicate tea set she played with as a little girl. She is aging so everything from and of her is extra special. Whether they are pretty or not is irrelevant; they are all lovely.

I cannot emphasize the power and beauty of this enchanting book enough! Each word evokes nostalgia.
Profile Image for Genene.
52 reviews
January 23, 2026
I just realized Bee Wilson's chapters are grouped: charms, mementos, junk, tools, symbols, gifts, and treasures. I went looking for the part, when read, that immediately reminded me of a long-forgotten blue enamel long handle butter warmer my mom cherished and my dad abused by boiling maple syrup inside. I read Bee's words with such interest and speed, I hadn't noticed the chapters. But what I did notice, like that handled pot, were the joys of my childhood and maybe what might kids might remember decades from now. The Heart-Shaped Tin is about feelings. About things. Kitchen things, mostly. It's also about grief and memory.

But what surprised me most, though, was what I learned. Rabbit holes of psychology, history, and culture like why Japanese families cherish and recycle baby food scissors or why Bruce Lee drinking horns have replaced storied African traditions, and what to not do with Argentinian budare pans. I learned about hoarders, the trauma of fleeing violent coups, and how families communicate.

I'm still thinking about this book. And I'm delivering my library copy, in -9 degrees, to a friend because I know it's written for her too.
Profile Image for Tanvi Bagadiya.
13 reviews3 followers
January 5, 2026
The Heart Shaped Tin made for a perfect end-of-year holiday read. It’s a quiet, thoughtful homage to the everyday objects that live in our kitchens and, by extension, in our lives. The book is structured around different objects, each placed carefully within the context of memory, routine, and emotion.
As someone who tends to hold on to things, this book felt oddly affirming. It reminds you that objects may exist for functional reasons, but what keeps them with us is far more emotional. They become vessels for sentiment, memory, and continuity.
What I appreciated most is how the book explores big themes: death, separation, childhood, new beginnings, entirely through inanimate things. These objects outlast moments and sometimes even people, carrying stories we can return to long after circumstances have changed.
It’s emotional without being overwhelming, reflective without being heavy. A gentle rollercoaster of feelings, and very much a book worth reading.
Profile Image for Jessie Salas.
28 reviews
January 14, 2026
The Heart-Shaped Tin by Bee Wilson is a thoughtful, quietly powerful book about the emotional weight we attach to the objects in our kitchens. Through stories of everyday items including spoons, tins, and tools tucked into drawers, Wilson shows how ordinary things come to hold deep meaning.

What resonated most for me was how powerfully our kitchens hold personal history. The little green rubber garlic peeler my grandma gave me before she passed away is one of those objects. Every time I use it, I think of her - her hands, her habits, her presence. It’s such a simple thing, yet it keeps her close.

One story I won’t forget is of a man in a concentration camp who made a spoon out of scrap metal. Forced to eat with his hands, he used that spoon as a quiet act of resistance holding onto dignity in the face of unimaginable cruelty.

This book made me look at my kitchen differently and reminded me that the objects we use every day often hold the people we love long after they’re gone.
Profile Image for Brenda.
292 reviews39 followers
November 17, 2025
I would like to thank BookBrowse and W.W. Norton and Company for the ARC copy I received.

The hearts shaped Tin by Bree Wilson is an exquisite testimony to how personal objects can affect us. They can cause happy, nostalgic or even bittersweet feelings and memories. The author did not just tell us her memories but she interviewed people to hear their memories. I loved the black and white picture of each object in the beginning of each chapter.
Brew Wilson is authentic and a really great writer. I plan on reading more of her stories.
5 reviews
January 28, 2026
The most heartwarming and pleasing book I've read in a long time. I've enjoyed two of Bee Wilson's other books, First Bite and The Secret of Cooking, but this feels like a departure from those. Even though there certainly is a food connection, it appeals to the sense of seeing wonder and finding joy in the ordinary amidst chaos. I enjoyed her short anecdotes from her personal like that are speckled throughout and the layout of the sections and chapter is perfect. When I'm invited to recommend a book for others, this will be it in 2026!
Profile Image for Jill.
38 reviews
August 14, 2025
Thank you W. W. Norton & Company for providing an advanced reader copy to this sweet book. I thoroughly enjoyed it and found myself slowing down to savor each chapter. Who doesn’t have a sentimental kitchen item; a spoon inherited from a favorite Aunt or grandmother, a special bowl used for mixing an heirloom recipe? This book makes you ponder those items in your own house and, in a disposable world makes you treasure them even more.
2,131 reviews
December 13, 2025
Sentimental book about how we form attachments to objects and the kind of magic that it seems to bring to our lives in doing that. Wilson writes of kitchen objects for the most part which certainly made me think of how many of the kitchen tools I have remind me of special times, rituals and family members. So, very tender and sentimental yet a bit long in the tooth in some ways. I felt that the same message was portrayed in multiple chapters.
46 reviews1 follower
December 28, 2025
A collection of stories about Bee and others shes interviewed and things people cherish. Hard for me to get into, but when I did, it was hard to stop. Made me thing about the items I love in my kitchen, the stories behind them, and the difference between mindless buying versus holding onto things with intention. A great book for anyone who appreciates the story behind an object or how something came to be
Profile Image for Carolyn Harris.
Author 7 books68 followers
January 29, 2026
The Heart Shaped Tin is both a memoir of love and loss and a meditation of how kitchen objects become infused with meaning. I especially enjoyed the chapters about gift giving, weddings and symbolism of kitchen objects in these celebrations. There are some fascinating interviews and historical chapters including Dave the Potter, who included poetry on his pottery and discussion with immigrants about what they brought with them when they moved from one country to another.
Profile Image for Susan Dixon.
176 reviews4 followers
November 8, 2025
Bee Wilson’s book explores the connection we have with material objects, particularly those found in the kitchen. A favorite spoon or bowl can become a symbol of the past, serving up strong memories of the past. Wilson includes interviews with people from other countries who share stories of cherished objects handed down from one family to the next.
Profile Image for Sara Green.
515 reviews3 followers
December 27, 2025
I got to around page 190 in this book before I realised I was now reading it for completion rather than reading it for enjoyment - never a good sign, so I am put it to one side for return to the library. I did enjoy quite a few of the kitchen ephemera related stories, but some chapters just felt a little too research-lead rather than personal, and these did not speak to me as strongly.
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