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DECEMBER 2024 READING

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The Paris Novel by Ruth Reichl

Published 2024  Penguin Random House, 288 pp

ISBN-13 978-0812996302

Book Club Meeting

December 17, 6:00 PM
Hosted by: Deb Holtz

Book selected by:  Patti Finnerty

Snack provided by:  Deb Fisher

​Wine provided by:  Nancy Hart, Patty Ard, et. al

Accessibility

Print​ and Large Print​

  • Finger Lakes Library System (print and large print)

 

​​E-book â€‹â€‹

  • Finger Lakes Library System

  • NY Public Library 
     

E-Audiobook ​

  • Finger Lakes Library System

  • NY Public Library

Ruth Reichl:  About the Author

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"Ruth Reichl is the New York Times bestselling author of five memoirs, the novels Delicious! and The Paris Novel, and the cookbook My Kitchen Year

 

She was editor in chief of Gourmet magazine, and previously served as restaurant critic for The New York Times, as well as food editor and restaurant critic for the Los Angeles Times. 

 

She has been honored with six James Beard Awards."

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SOURCE

Author Resources

The Paris Novel

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NJ Monthly:  Ruth Reichel and Eric Ripert Catch Up at Montclair Library Festival

"Two foodie icons—Ruth Reichl, the former Gourmet editor and food critic for the New York Times, and Eric Ripert, the chef and owner of famed New York City restaurant Le Bernardin—made a stop in New Jersey on Thursday.

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Appearing as part of Succeed2gether’s Montclair Literary Festival, the pair spoke to a sold-out crowd at the Glen Ridge Country Club about Reichl’s new book, The Paris Novel, as well as food critics, cooking and, of course, restaurants.

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Ripert, 59, who is French, is widely considered one of the best chefs in the world. He earned four stars from the New York Times for his famous restaurant at the age of 29, and three stars from the Michelin Guide.

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Reichl’s novel, her second, is an adventure about food, art and fashion in 1980s Paris—partly based on her own travels there. It follows a young woman who goes to Paris after her mother dies and leaves her with a one-way plane ticket and a note that reads: 'Go to Paris.' Alone in a foreign city, she meets a who’s who of the Parisian literary, art and culinary worlds.

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Many readers first encountered Reichl when she was the much-admired restaurant critic for the New York Times. She’s also the author of several memoirs, including Tender at the Bone, Comfort Me with Apples and Garlic and Sapphires.

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At the event, Ripert, who is now friends with Reichl, said he remembered when he first heard that the Times had a new restaurant critic back in 1993. All the top chefs in New York, he recalled, were nervous about what she would be like. Ripert had also heard that Reichl hated French food.

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'When you came to New York, the food critics of the New York Times were really powerful,' Ripert recalled to Reichl. 'At the time, you could close or open a restaurant depending on the review. I never told you this, but before you arrived, everyone was faxing pictures of you, saying that Ruth Reichl was coming to New York. We were so scared of you—we thought, We’re going to get destroyed.'

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Reichl remembered that, too: 'I knew there were pictures of me floating around, and that someone said, ‘She has a lot of curly hair, and she smiles a lot.’ I thought, Oh, that’s good. They think whenever someone in the restaurant smiles a lot, it must be me.'

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In 1995, Reichl gave Le Bernardin—Ripert’s flagship restaurant serving modern French cuisine, his first four-star review in the Times.

'I was 29 years old, and you basically saved my job and my life,' Ripert said. Le Bernardin went on to receive six more four-star reviews from the Times—an unprecedented achievement. Ripert would go on to appear on several TV cooking shows, including Top Chef, A Cook’s Tour and Anthony Bourdain’s No Reservations and Parts Unknown. Ripert and Bourdain were close friends until Bourdain’s death in 2018.

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In Reichl’s novel, the main character, Stella, tastes her first oysters and discovers a passion for food in the City of Lights. Every meal in the book, Reichl said, is based on a meal that she actually ate in Paris.

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'One of the reasons I chose to set [the book] in 1983 is that when I went to Paris, I was living on $2 a day—which in those days, you could do,' she said. (A year later, she was named the restaurant critic of the Los Angeles Times—her first job with an expense account.)

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'Stella is experiencing all of this for the very first time,' she explained. 'So I got to imagine—really imagine—what it’s like for someone who’s never experienced pleasure, to give herself to the food. And it was very fun for me to do that.'”

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SOURCE

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