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Typhoid Mary
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Description
'Bourdain's prose is utterly riveting' New York Magazine
'A juicy drama ... Bourdain creates a varied historical portrait of Mallon's time' Seattle Times
The story of a notorious cook and a riveting slice of 1900s New York from the bestselling author of Kitchen Confidential
In 1906, at a prosperous Long Island summer home, a family falls ill and typhoid is diagnosed. When Dr George Soper is called in to find the source of the contagion, he notices that the household cook has gone missing. She is Mary Mallon, the woman who would become known as Typhoid Mary.
Soper, sanitary engineer turned sleuth, sees Mary as his Moriarty. He finds there has been an outbreak of typhoid fever in every household she has worked in over the past decade. Mary is a 'carrier', a seemingly healthy individual who passes on her dangerous germs, sometimes with fatal consequences. Now Soper must hunt the cook down before she can infect more unsuspecting victims. A poor Irish immigrant, Mary refuses to believe that she can harbour typhoid in her strong and healthy body, and she doesn't intend to go quietly.
In this fascinating true story, Bourdain, in an homage from one cook to another, follows Mary through the kitchens of New York, putting a human face to a desperate and unintentional murderer, and examines a time, and a life, with his inimitable style.
Product details
Published | 21 Feb 2005 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 160 |
ISBN | 9780747566878 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Paperbacks |
Dimensions | 198 x 129 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
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Reviews
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'What Jean Genet was to the prison, what Tom Waits is to the lowlife bar, Bourdain is to the restaurant kitchen: a charmingly roguish guide to a tough, grimy underworld with its own particular rules and rituals ... a tale of hot pursuit, with the rude gusto and barbed wit that made Kitchen Confidential such a full-bodied pleasure'
New York Times Book Review
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'Raw, readable prose'
Entertainment Weekly
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'Bourdain's prose is utterly riveting'
New York Magazine
-
'A juicy drama ... Bourdain creates a varied historical portrait of Mallon's time'
Seattle Times