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A Fork in the Road: Tales of Food, Pleasure and Discovery on the Road

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Lonely Planet: The world's leading travel guide publisher



A Fork in the Road: Tales of Food, Pleasure and Discovery on the Road



2014 James Beard Award Nominee and 2014 Society of Travel Writers Foundation Thomas Lowell Travel Journalism Bronze Award Winner for Travel Book


Join us at the table for this 34-course banquet of original stories from food-obsessed writers and chefs sharing their life-changing food experiences.


The dubious joy of a Twinkie, the hunger-sauced rhapsody of fish heads, the grand celebration of an Indian wedding feast; the things we eat and the people we eat with remain powerful signposts in our memories, long after the plates have been cleared. Tuck in, and bon appetit!



Featuring tales from: James Oseland, Frances Mayes, Giles Coren, Curtis Stone, Annabel Langbein, Neil Perry, Tamasin Day-Lewis, Jay Rayner, Madhur Jaffrey, Michael Pollan, Josh Ozersky, Marcus Samuelsson, Naomi Duguid, Jane and Michael Stern, Francine Prose, Ma Thanegi, Kaui Hart Hemmings, Rita Mae Brown, Monique Truong, Fuschia Dunlop, David Kamp, Mas Masumoto, Daniel Vaughn, Tom Carson, Andre Aciman, MJ Hyland, Alan Richman, Beth Kracklauer, Sigrid Nunez, Chang Rae Lee, Julia Reed, Gael Greene



About Lonely Planet: Since 1973, Lonely Planet has become the world's leading travel media company with guidebooks to every destination, a suite of inspiring travel pictorials, literature, and references, an award-winning website, mobile and digital travel products, and a dedicated traveller community. Lonely Planet covers must-see spots but also enables curious travelers to get off beaten paths to understand more of the culture of the places in which they find themselves.


Important Notice: The digital edition of this book may not contain all of the images found in the physical edition.

336 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 1, 2013

99 people are currently reading
739 people want to read

About the author

James Oseland

12 books15 followers
James Oseland is an American writer, editor and television personality. He is the author and editor-in-chief of World Food, an acclaimed book series from Ten Speed Press. He served as editor-in-chief of the U.S. food magazine Saveur from 2006 to 2014. His memoir and cookbook Cradle of Flavor (2006, W.W. Norton) was named one of the best books of 2006 by the New York Times, Time Asia, and Good Morning America, among others. He has edited an array of bestselling and award-winning anthologies and cookbooks, notably Saveur: The New Comfort Food (2011, Chronicle), A Fork In the Road (2013, Lonely Planet), and Saveur: The New Classics (2014, Weldon Owen). His writing has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, Gourmet, Vogue, and dozens of other media outlets. He was a judge from 2009 to 2013 on the Bravo television series Top Chef Masters.
Oseland is the author of Jimmy Neurosis (2019, Ecco Press), a critically acclaimed coming-of-age memoir set against the California and New York City punk rock movements of the late 1970s. Out called the book "nonstop entertainment," while Rolling Stone hailed it as a "vibrant coming-of-age memoir [told] in an instantly lovable voice."

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5 stars
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240 (39%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 86 reviews
Profile Image for Biblio Files (takingadayoff).
609 reviews295 followers
December 9, 2013
Better than average anthology, by which I mean I enjoyed about three quarters of the essays (average being about half). These are pretty short entries, around ten small format pages apiece, so they go quickly. There doesn't seem to be any particular order, so you can skip around, picking the authors you like or the titles that intrigue. But try to get around to all the essays, because there are some that might surprise. I enjoyed a quirky essay by M.J. Hyland, an author I hadn't heard of, about her trip to Finland, in which she found herself cashless (and apparently without a credit card). Her return flight and hotel were already paid for so she only had to worry about food and entertainment. Her solution was effective if rather unorthodox. I also liked Tom Carson's experiences of Indian food, years ago as the teenage son of a Foreign Service officer, and later when his parents-in-law turned out to be experts in Indian cuisine. Andre Aciman's account of his family's disastrous stay at a Tuscan farmhouse was fun, and Francine Prose's family's lunch at a village restaurant in France was hilarious. A fun book to dip into for a light snack.
Profile Image for Lily.
791 reviews16 followers
December 17, 2016
This was a delight to read, and truly served a very important purpose. To distract me and comfort me while the whole world is going to shit. I had noticed a pattern that my reading has been pretty heavy the past few books, and was really just desperate for something fun and fluffy à la Norah Ephron. And boy did the food writers who compiled A Fork in the Road deliver! I mean the lady who wrote Under the Tuscan Goddamned Sun wrote an essay.

Reading all that food writing blends together with the same few terms and flavors, and it really is a warm, comforting, culinary blanket. It wasn't life changing, but it did make me hungry.
Profile Image for Kelly (The Happiest Little Book Club).
534 reviews32 followers
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September 22, 2024
I have been enjoying this book over the last three months.

The book contains 30+ mini memoirs of how food can shape us and our memories. How it inspires our travels, ties smells and flavours to our favourite people (grandparents, parents, siblings, friends), and inspires careers.

The short stories touch on everything from favourite dishes growing up and experiencing different cultures and cuisines, to how longing to try a "popular food" only to have it disappoint you, can shape your childhood (Hostess Twinkies).

I liked that this book had so many short stories/mini memoirs because it made it easy to pick up when I was between ball games this summer or when enjoying a short amount of quality alone time.

If I smell onions being sautéed in butter, it immediately takes me back to being in my Grandma's kitchen. One of the best pizzas of my LIFE was eaten at Allo Pizza (on the island of Mo'orea) during our honeymoon. I am sure we all have a food memory like this. :)
Profile Image for John.
2,154 reviews196 followers
March 4, 2020
Put this essay collection on my phone to pick up and read a couple of entries whenever I had some downtime. Worked well for that purpose, although some entries worked better than others.
Profile Image for Margaret.
Author 20 books104 followers
January 1, 2014
This book combines two of my favourite things: food and travel.

I especially loved the article by Giles Coren about Hostess Twinkies. It totally took me back to my childhood and my obsession with getting to taste one. And my experience when I finally did mirrored his completely.

Fantastic book, but beware the urge to snack whilst reading.
Profile Image for Nina.
321 reviews11 followers
May 27, 2017
Essays about food AND travel? Sign me up! As with any essay collection, it's a bit hit or miss, but the hits are a delight and even the misses aren't terrible. Jane and Michael Stern's essay about the nudie truck stop is definitely among the hits.
Profile Image for Chrissy .
65 reviews
April 1, 2014
Great collection of short stories - all of them well written! Great read of you love food or love travel or especially both!
Profile Image for Maggie Skarich Joos.
264 reviews6 followers
October 12, 2016
Fun anthology of food and travel stories. You will know a lot of the authors from tv and foodie "royalty".
Profile Image for Ian House.
229 reviews4 followers
October 2, 2022
A very enjoyable collection of short pieces relating to food.

It's a rich and diverse collection with most of the stories hitting the right notes. Those that deal with interesting places, time periods or really exploring one particular food are the highlights and there are too many to metion. A couple fall into the trap of just listing the things eaten, particularly the ones on American BBQ and an Aussie chef in Paris, but they are rare missteps in an otherwise excellent collection.
Profile Image for Neko~chan.
514 reviews25 followers
July 9, 2024
Actually a wonderful collection of essays. Better than Best American Food Writing imo. Delicious, thoughtful, and interesting.
Profile Image for Dominic.
299 reviews7 followers
February 18, 2017
I have never really thought about reading a book about food. Don't get me wrong, I love food; I love eating it, I love cooking it, I love trying new foods and when I travel I do try to find and sample as many of the local specialities as I can. However, it has never crossed my mind that reading about food (other than a recipe book) was a thing. But, when I subscribed to Kobo for the year and got a free ebook from a choice of terrible looking titles, only one book stood out, purely for the "Lonely Planet" bit at the top. I love travelling as much as I love food, and Lonely Planet guides have helped me navigate and find interesting new places all around the world, so I trust them, so I chose this book.

Most of the stories are interesting enough, a few are very good, many of them left my stomach rumbling and my mouth watering and, sadly, a few made me fall asleep. If there were fewer of these ones I would have given the book a higher rating!

Despite the bad stories though, this book actually did change the way I travel, and the way I think about the food I eat whilst I travel. As I mentioned before, I do always like to sample different foods from around the world, and reading these anecdotes it made me realise that many of my best experiences I have had when travelling, (either in exotic countries or around the UK), have involved food! From meals cooked over open fires in little huts in China's southern jungles, to my first taste of freshly caught fish which me and my sisters and friends gleefully gutted when on a childhood holiday in Devon, a lot of great memories revolve around food. The fact I was reading this whilst travelling in Cambodia and Vietnam also made me want to try as much food as I could, which is part of the reason I felt inclined to try (and I don't recommend it) giant cockroach in Phnom Penh, sour palm wine at the side of the road in Ankor Watt, Vietnamese street food which tasted delicious and brought me much closer to the porcelain in my hotels and hostels I stayed in and many other culinary delights from around that part of South East Asia.

I am very glad I read this book, it has added another dimension to my experiences of both travel and food!
Profile Image for Camilla.
284 reviews5 followers
February 16, 2019
Many of the contributors' names were familiar to me - Curtis Stone, Madhur Jaffrey, Frances Mayes, Martin Yan, Michael Pollan, and Carla Hall - just to name a few. But some were not - Giles Coren, Annabel Langbein, and Ma Thanegi, for example - and I was grateful for the brief bio of each contributor at the beginning of the piece.

Most of the contributors' pieces details their discovery of food. Good food. Or they might discuss how they embarked on their culinary trajectory. In any case, this book is filled with life-altering food experiences.

In Curtis Stone's "An Italian Education," I found myself missing Italy tremendously. He writes, "It makes perfect sense that the slow-food movement began in Italy. That relaxed, leisurely philosophy to cooking permeated everything they did. Except perhaps driving." He credits his time in Franciavilla, Calabria with teaching him everything about why he wanted to cook.

Francine Prose had me longing for cassoulet after reading her "We'll Have the Cassoulet." She shares, "Every bean was a masterpiece. The chunks of sausage were sublime. I thought I'd known something about duck confit, but until now I'd known nothing. I'd been a cassoulet virgin."

Joe Dunthorne wrote about sanguinaccio in Sardinia. Fuchsia Dunlop chased the tail of Chiuchow cooking. And Alan Richman, in "Omar Sharif Slept Here," lamented Cairo cuisine. "I can't understand how a people whose civilization predates all others couldn't come up with tastier food," he writes.

It's impossible to pick a favorite piece because they were all so fantastic. Seriously. If you have any inclination towards food writing, this is a must read.
Profile Image for Candice.
546 reviews
May 6, 2018
I love my food porn seasoned with tidbits of information. Curtis Stone ran the bulls in Pamplona! Carla Hall was a model in Paris! Gael Greene writes erotic fiction! And most astonishingly of all, James Oseland was a punk in the 70’s!! I read essays that made me hungry and essays that made me squeamish. I wish to be an adventurous eater, but I draw the line at blood soup and maggot cheese.
Profile Image for Georgie.
593 reviews10 followers
May 19, 2014
A fantastic little collection. Writers and chefs who love food share stories about dishes that they enjoyed in a particular place at a particular time and which changed or had significance in their lives personally or professionally. Some of them write about favourite dishes enjoyed at the tables of their own families, others write about the food of their home country, while others describe trips to destinations around the world defined by the meals they ate.

I greatly enjoyed all the essays except for one - Tom Carson - while the food descriptions were wonderful, he seemed to feel the need to slip his own political views and agenda into his essay. It wouldn't have been a problem if the political stuff had somehow been connected with the food he was talking about (as it is in Ma Thanegi's wonderful and fascinating little essay) but it didn't. It just sat there like (pardon the pun) a hair in your food, it was utterly unnecessary and just typical middle-class-liberal-American showboating. Not that his views aren't entirely valid, some of them are, they just have no place in that particular essay, and ruined what could have been a fun foray into Indian wedding feasts.

But I guess you get one disappointment in some form in any collection of writing, and this one is wonderful otherwise.
Profile Image for Amy.
711 reviews14 followers
April 18, 2018
While reading this book I was reminded of ordering whole grilled sardines in Portugal. They were served whole: eyes, scales, guts, and all. I wondered if I had the guts to eat this small school staring up at me from my plate. I did. I paid for it later. This was a reminder of what I already knew: my stomach is not as adventurous as I am.

These 34 essays by various food/travel writers about food span the globe and range of experience. Some are merely anecdotal; some are reflective and show the transformative power of both travel and food in all parts of the world. If you're homebound and need to get away for a bit, this selection is the ticket.
Profile Image for Anne Green.
654 reviews17 followers
October 19, 2014
A piece of light indulgence rather like a tasty snack that whets the appetite for more. This collection is described as a "34-course banquet of original stories" and there's definitely all the variety of a banquet. The consistent theme is food and travel, those subjects of perennial appeal. All the stories are well written and bear evidence of each author's passion for his or her subject. Interesting to read those by well known Australian foodies, Neil Perry and Curtis Stone. If you love food, travel and a diverting, entertaining read, this one's for you.
1,760 reviews26 followers
February 11, 2015
A Fork in the Road is a book full of travel writing/food essays. Each writer shares a story about food most often though not always related to a travel experience. As is usually the case with these types of compilations I enjoyed some of the stories more than others. I liked the ones where people wove their experiences in with the food more than those that seemed to just concentrate on the food itself. I read this for a book club, so I'll be interested to hear what everyone else had to say about it.
Profile Image for Ellyn.
309 reviews
October 24, 2017
This is a book of short essays about food, specifically food that is connected to a travel experience or strong sense of place for each author. Most of the authors are food writers or chefs. I love travel, and I love food, so it seemed like the perfect book for me! I did enjoy it, some stories more than others, and it was fun to reflect on my own experiences with food growing up and during my travels as an adult. It took me a while to get through it, but that might just be because I read it during a busy time, and short stories don’t tend to draw me in as much as other formats do.
428 reviews10 followers
February 6, 2014
I love food-related essays and this one didn't disappoint. Most entries are short. Some are funny. Others are heartbreaking. I was especially touched by the Ozersky's story of his trip to Paris with his father. Tamasin Day-Lewis describes fishing with family and friends off the coast of Ireland. The decription of cooking and eating the catch will make your mouth water. Fans of Ruth Reichl anf M.F.K. Fisher won't want to miss this.
Profile Image for Jennell McHugh.
Author 1 book8 followers
Read
January 4, 2016
Enjoyed this particularly because the food/dishes were sometimes roundabout/sometimes central to the experience being shared. Likewise, those sharing experiences in this exercise were not all chefs or food critics so the approach and relationship to food - and writing about it - varied, and stirred up my interest in exploring the main medium of some of the contributors. Also, definitely piqued my interest to explore some previously unknown gems.
Profile Image for Meredith Walker.
526 reviews2 followers
January 8, 2017
This is a wonderfully accessible exploration of how food and drink is so much more than food and drink. The 34 original stories from food-obsessed writers and chefs are as digestible as the life-changing food experiences they describe. Although, like all short story collections really, it has its highs and lows to provide readers with favourite chapters to savour and other, more self-indulgent ones that might be skipped through more quickly.
Profile Image for Christina.
348 reviews3 followers
May 11, 2014
A nice mix of up-and-coming and well-established authors,many of them contributing writers for "Saveur," are included in this anthology. I intended to use this as inspiration for my own writing yet I found myself putting this down after only 9 of the stories.

Perhaps I prefer my bite-sized food reading in monthly magazine format.
139 reviews
November 24, 2014
It looks like I took 6 months to read this and I guess I did. It's all short stories about different people in the food world and their memorable experience with food
Some were tedious to read but others got me totally involved with the food. I used this book as a time filler and not a cover to cover read
Profile Image for Laura.
13 reviews2 followers
May 29, 2015
It's a great book. Really. The short stories are intriguing and draw you in. It almost creates a green eyed monster within you. However, I have a hard time focuses on multiple stories. Some were almost too short, not giving you enough time to get into them. Be sure to have a snack when you read this - you surely will be hungry!
56 reviews
October 14, 2014
I love memoirs and essays, especially when food and travel are involved, so this collection was made for me. Some of these were wonderful, others were ok. But the best truly transported me. Kaui Hart Hemmings writes beautifully about cross cultural adoption and Madhur Jaffrey takes readers on a lovely tour of Sri Lanka. I'm also looking forward to reading more from Anabel Langbien.
Profile Image for Liz.
23 reviews1 follower
March 20, 2016
Beautiful compilation of stories from individuals passionate about food and travel. Highly recommend-- especially the stories with Adam and Eve Diner, the barbecue hunt across the state of Georgia, the story about the kitschy new step mum and the pink-purple squid sambal, Michael Pollan's take on Kim chi, and Marcus Samuelsson's quest for fugu and overall epiphany about Japanese cuisine.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Kayla Tornello.
1,685 reviews16 followers
June 3, 2016
It was interesting to get so many different perspectives on food experiences that stood out to the different writers. It was interesting to read their unique stories. I also appreciated that these experiences occurred all over the world. None of the stories really stood out and seemed that great to me, but none of them were poorly written, either.
107 reviews1 follower
September 8, 2016
Very uneven. Some really super essays and some that made me wonder how low the bar is for food writers. Or maybe the editor just took random clips from already existing work and had to reach to fill the space? A quick read so I didn't mind, but I've certainly read better compilations. Don't read it on an empty stomach, though - some of the food descriptions will leave you drooling.
Profile Image for Carina.
45 reviews1 follower
November 25, 2016
This collection of short stories has the perfect combination of food and travel experiences. The wildly varying writing styles are all faithful to communicating the meaning and joy that food brings to our lives, and how it etches itself into our memories. I wasn't familiar with all the authors names, but have discovered some that I am going to pursue further now.
704 reviews1 follower
November 2, 2017
Because this is a collection of stories it took me forever to read it. There was nothing to keep me interested in going back to it. I read this as part of a challenge this year to read a book with a utensil in the title but not Autobiography of a Spoon. I tried several and came to the conclusion that I am just not into cutlery titled books.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 86 reviews

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