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True Confections

por Katharine Weber

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
1956139,630 (3.24)3
Take chocolate candy, add a family business at war with itself, and stir with an outsider’s perspective. This is the recipe forTrue Confections, the irresistible new novel by Katharine Weber, a writer whose work has won accolades from Iris Murdoch, Madeleine L’Engle, Wally Lamb, and Kate Atkinson, to name a few.   Alice Tatnall Ziplinsky’s marriage into the Ziplinsky family has not been unanimously celebrated. Her greatest ambition is to belong, to feel truly entitled to the heritage she has tried so hard to earn. Which is why Zip’s Candies is much more to her than just a candy factory, where she has worked for most of her life. InTrue Confections, Alice has her reasons for telling the multigenerational saga of the family-owned-and-operated candy company, now in crisis.   Nobody is more devoted than Alice to delving into the truth of Zip’s history, starting with the rags-to-riches story of how Hungarian immigrant Eli Czaplinsky developed his famous candy lines, and how each of his candies, from Little Sammies to Mumbo Jumbos, was inspired by an element in a stolen library copy of Little Black Sambo, from which he taught himself English. Within Alice’s vivid and persuasive account (is her unreliability a tactic or a condition?) are the stories of a runaway slave from the cacao plantations of C te d’Ivoire and the Third Reich’s failed plan to establish a colony on Madagascar for European Jews.   Richly informed, deeply moving, and spiked with Weber’s trademark wit,True Confectionsis, at its heart, a timeless and universal story of love, betrayal, and chocolate. From the Hardcover edition.… (más)
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» Ver también 3 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 6 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Sharp, dark, and funny w/ an enigmatic, opinionated, and cranky narrator who rivals Charles Kinbote for sheer unreliability. Much fun. ( )
  laurenbufferd | Nov 14, 2016 |
A funny, edgy book. The narrator, Alice Tatnall Ziplinsky, is so perfectly off-kilter -- she's both sympathetic and disconcerting, often at the same time -- that she lends a slightly funhouse feeling to the story's telling. This dynastic epic of a candy-making family encompasses immigration, assimilation, success, failure, racism, inclusion, and everything you ever wanted to know about the candy business, all skillfully interwoven. And Alice's weird, funny, almost-perfectly-reasonable voice is the perfect medium. You pay attention, because Alice is the kind of narrator you want to keep an eye on, and in the process the story unwinds vividly. This is a smart novel, out of the ordinary and fun -- recommended whether you have a sweet tooth or not (although that's definitely an asset). ( )
  lisapeet | Oct 11, 2013 |
The detail, the detail, the excessive detail regarding candy and candy production - far and away my favorite thing about this book. The writing is smart enough that I'll seek out other books by this author someday. It's difficult to construct an after-the-fact first person narrative that doesn't give away the whole story until the right time, and Weber succeeds. I did get a little bogged down at times just because I occasionally get frustrated with unreliable narrators. But since I also get frustrated with real, live unreliable narrators...maybe that speaks to this book's believability. ( )
  Knicke | Feb 18, 2011 |
A fun, dizzying romp charting the rise and fall of one family's candy-making fortunes, told entirely from the perspective of an outsider who married into the business and who may or may not be slightly insane. I happen to love an unreliable narrator, as well as books in which I learn something about an unfamiliar world, so I found this novel a thoroughly enjoyable antidote to the end-of-winter doldrums. ( )
1 vota booksinthebelfry | Mar 11, 2010 |
The protagonist of this book, Alice Tatnall Ziplinsky, is not the easiest person to like. She's got her quirks. But she also cares a great deal about her family and especially the family business, which is candy making. Written as an affidavit, this is the story of one complicated family, two fires, and a whole lot of sugar. The premise is interesting and the pages begin to turn themselves as the reader puzzles over what's the truth and what's just Alice. It's also full of fascinating historical tidbits about the candy industry which are a lot of fun. ( )
  JackieBlem | Oct 18, 2009 |
Mostrando 1-5 de 6 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Alice Tatnall Ziplinsky, the antiheroine and narrator of Katharine Weber's wickedly funny new novel, True Confections, has a voice so incisive and tart that as soon as I finished reading the book I started at the beginning and read the entire thing over again. I savored it even more the second time.
 
Katharine Weber's comic fifth novel, True Confections, is a wry, sly, and sassy tale told by a gossipy and wisecracking narrator who is unreliable and proud of it. The book opens with an affidavit, in which Alice Tatnell Ziplinsky of New Haven, Connecticut swears the matters, facts and things she describes are "true and correct to the best of my knowledge." Uh huh. From that point on, her outpouring is tartly subjective, infused with embellishments and distortions, and in varying degrees hilarious, irritating, and oddly touching.
 
The business of America is candy. “True Confections” is a great American tale.
 
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Take chocolate candy, add a family business at war with itself, and stir with an outsider’s perspective. This is the recipe forTrue Confections, the irresistible new novel by Katharine Weber, a writer whose work has won accolades from Iris Murdoch, Madeleine L’Engle, Wally Lamb, and Kate Atkinson, to name a few.   Alice Tatnall Ziplinsky’s marriage into the Ziplinsky family has not been unanimously celebrated. Her greatest ambition is to belong, to feel truly entitled to the heritage she has tried so hard to earn. Which is why Zip’s Candies is much more to her than just a candy factory, where she has worked for most of her life. InTrue Confections, Alice has her reasons for telling the multigenerational saga of the family-owned-and-operated candy company, now in crisis.   Nobody is more devoted than Alice to delving into the truth of Zip’s history, starting with the rags-to-riches story of how Hungarian immigrant Eli Czaplinsky developed his famous candy lines, and how each of his candies, from Little Sammies to Mumbo Jumbos, was inspired by an element in a stolen library copy of Little Black Sambo, from which he taught himself English. Within Alice’s vivid and persuasive account (is her unreliability a tactic or a condition?) are the stories of a runaway slave from the cacao plantations of C te d’Ivoire and the Third Reich’s failed plan to establish a colony on Madagascar for European Jews.   Richly informed, deeply moving, and spiked with Weber’s trademark wit,True Confectionsis, at its heart, a timeless and universal story of love, betrayal, and chocolate. From the Hardcover edition.

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