I've not read many of the Object Lessons books, partly because having mentally categorised them as '33 1/3 for stuff', many of the topics have seemed to lack the necessary thing-ness (Hashtag, Traffic, Environment? Too small, too abstract, too big. Bring me *objects*, I say, banging the desk like J Jonah Jameson). Gin, though, that qualifies, just like the last one I read, Potato. Indeed, you can make the one from the other - one very interesting section covers the US legal definition of gin, whereby one maker, intending to produce a barrel-aged gin, very nearly found themselves producing whiskey instead. Elsewhere, the roads taken were more familiar; Humphrey freely admits to being an enthusiastic amateur keen to introduce others, and obviously she could hardly omit the gin craze, Hogarth, Fielding &c, though occasionally odd readings creep in, as when she talks about Pepys taking "strong water made from juniper" medicinally, then suggesting that, being a respected man, if he had taken it for pleasure he probably wouldn't have admitted that in writing. Which seems rather to overlook some of the other pleasures he did admit in writing, albeit coded. More subjectively, I was surprised to see the Divine Comedy's Gin-Soaked Boy described as a sad song - though in a sense all Divine Comedy songs are sad right now, because I was meant to be seeing them play Liberation and Promenade in full tomorrow.
Still, these were the exceptions. For the most part, her enthusiasm is winning, her research intriguing and her musings illuminating (the one that's particularly lingered - why are there so many more gin-flavoured things than juniper-flavoured, and what does that even mean?). Although one little nugget in the acknowledgements could have sustained a chapter of its own - she did all of this investigating, collecting, and sampling of gin while married to a recovering alcoholic, who apparently didn't mind!
(Netgalley ARC)