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Sweets
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A History of Candy


By

Publisher: Bloomsbury USA
ISBN: 1582343071    
Release Date: 2003-11-05

List Price: USD 14.95     Paperback

Buy it from:   amazon.com (from US$ 5.24)

Book description:

In Sweets, Tim Richardson takes us on a magical confectionery tour, letting his personal passion fuel the narrative of candy's rich and unusual history. Beginning with a description of the biology of sweetness itself, Richardson navigates the ancient history of sweets, the incredible range and diversity of candies worldwide, the bizarre figures and practices of the confectionery industry, and the connection between food and sex. He goes on to explore the role of sweets in myth and folklore and, finally, offers a personal philosophy of continual sweet-eating based on the writings of Epicurus.

A delicious blend of anecdote, history, and investigative reporting, Sweets is the perfect gift for anyone who loves candy.

Frequently used tags (out of 5):

candy (1)   chocolate (1)   confectionery (1)   history (1)   sweets (1)  

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Reviews from people like you (1)

2 out of 2 found this helpful:

Excellent history of candy (and some pastries/chocolates)

Eric B.(Urbana, IL)   

Tim Richardson is a self-styled "international confectionery historian", and his book proves that he's the genuine article. His interest in and enthusiasm for sweets of all kinds, from all of the great international candy-making traditions is unparalleled, and rubs off on the reader. It would be easy to scoff at the idea of a history of candy, taking it just as lightly as we take candy itself. But Mr. Richardson is very serious about his topic, and has done extensive research; footnotes and references to other works abound. Somehow, however, he manages to keep a light-hearted and easy to follow writing style.

The book's topics span from various types of sugar-sweets to pastries to chocolates to even brief discussions of the chemical and cultural effects of particular sweets. Each topic is compartmentalized well enough to allow for this to be an excellent bathroom reading or just-before-bed book.

If you want to impress your friends with an immense knowledge of sweets (did you know that the solid eating chocolate we all know and love wasn't invented until 1847?), and want to gain that knowledge in as little time and as easily as possible, this is your book. Mr. Richardson has already done all of the hard scholarship for you. "Sweets: A History of Candy" even inspired me to pursue my own original multi-cultural pastry creations.

2006-02-04 16:20   |    comment   



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