In 2017, Valerie Stivers started writing about food in classic fiction for The Paris Review. Her particular project for the “Eat Your Words” column would be cooking and baking her way through literature. It was a larger undertaking than she realized and became something of an obsession. A selection of the greatest hits made it into The Writer’s Table. Each few-page biographical profile opens with a recipe drawn from that author’s work or developed by Stivers. A surprising number of writers published cookbooks – or had one compiled after their death – including Maya Angelou, Jane Austen (of family friend and housekeeper Martha Lloyd’s recipes), Ernest Hemingway, Barbara Pym, George Sand and Alice B. Toklas.
Though I’ve read a lot by and about D.H. Lawrence, I didn’t realise he did all the cooking in his household with Frieda, and was renowned for his bread. And who knew that Emily Dickinson was better known in her lifetime as a baker? Her coconut cake is beautifully simple, containing just six ingredients. Flannery O’Connor’s peppermint chiffon pie also sounds delicious. Some essays do not feature a recipe but a discussion of food in an author’s work, such as the unusual combinations of mostly tinned foods that Iris Murdoch’s characters eat. It turns out that that’s how she and her husband John Bayley ate, so she saw nothing odd about it. And Murakami’s 2005 New Yorker story “The Year of Spaghetti” is about a character whose fixation on one foodstuff reflects, Stivers notes, his “emotional … turmoil.”
The alphabetical arrangement of the pieces emphasizes the wide range of eras, regions, and genres. It’s a fun book for browsing, though I might have liked more depth on fewer authors. I especially liked the listicles on “Writers’ Favourite Cocktails” – E.B. White’s triple-strength gin martinis sound lethal! – and “Writers Who Didn’t Eat Proper Meals.” Proust subsisted on croissants and café au lait, while Highsmith ate nothing but bacon and eggs (hers being mostly a liquid diet). Katie Tomlinson’s colourful sketches are delightful. I enjoyed having this around to flick through and can recommend it as a gift for the literary foodie in your life.
With thanks to Anne Cater of Random Things Tours and Frances Lincoln (Quarto Books) for the free copy for review.
Buy The Writer’s Table from Bookshop.org [affiliate link]
I was pleased to be part of the blog tour for The Writer’s Table. See below for details of where other reviews have appeared or will appear soon.

This sounds a treat! I can see it in small piles next to booksellers’ tills come November.
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It certainly screams ‘gift book’!
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I’m really delighted by the idea of Emily Dickinson baking coconut cake!
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I loved how simple the recipe was in her notes. Though “1 grated cocoa nut” belies a lot of hard work!
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This sounds like it would make a great companion to The Little Library Cookbook, which I had for a while (it got lost in a house move) and which recreated dishes from classic literature – I always really wanted to make the boeuf en daube from To the Lighthouse, in particular! The list of Writers Who Didn’t Eat Proper Meals is very entertaining.
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Oh, that sounds cute. I’ve been perusing Tequila Mockingbird for cocktail recipes I could achieve based on what’s in my cupboard 😉
How tragic to lose books during a move! In the back of my mind I wonder if I’ve lost a box of mementoes in the upheaval since my parents left my last home with them.
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It’s always a hazard. I also could swear that I lost a Willa Cather novel after we hired professional cleaners for a spring-clean afternoon – it was absolutely on the bookshelf before they arrived and it wasn’t there that night. I like to think one of the cleaners was inspired to take it and has since had a literary odyssey.
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That’s a charitable way to think about it! In the days when one would change money before a trip and carry cash, we accidentally left a travel wallet with $500 in the seatback of an airplane. We realized soon and started making enquiries, but it was never found. I hope an underpaid cleaner was able to put it to good use! (We later reclaimed about half the money on travel insurance.)
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That does sound fun. I was just talking about food films with a writer friend–we must all be very hungry!–like Babette’s Feast and Big Night and a newer one she just saw, The Taste of Things. I could read about and look at food all day. The illustrations in The Writer’s Table look really delightful too.
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I like to read and think about food much more than I like to cook it! (I do bake, though.)
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Thanks so much for supporting the blog tour x
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Thanks for organising! (An especially fab poster this time.)
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I’d never considered Emily Dickinson as a baker! I seemed to think that she just sat around all day moodily writing poems, ha ha!
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It is funny to think about, isn’t it? I guess only her close family and a few trusted confidants knew that she was writing at all.
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I wondered if these would be bound: I thoroughly enjoyed them via TPR site!
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More fun to encounter in that way, I expect.
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