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Corked: A Memoir

por Kathryn Borel

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
11420238,607 (2.78)23
Biography & Autobiography. Cooking & Food. Nonfiction. HTML:

Meet Kathryn Borel, absurd bon vivant and daughter of duty. Now meet her father, Philippe, former chef, eccentric genius, and wine aficionado extraordinaire. Kathryn is like her father in every way but one: she doesn't get it when it comes to wine. And although Philippe has devoted untold parenting hours to delivering impassioned, oenological orations, she has managed to remain unenlightened. But after an accident and a death, Kathryn realizes that by shutting herself off to her father's greatest passion, she will never really know him. So, she proposes a drunken father-daughter road trip. As they drive through the country, meeting with vintners, touring vineyards, laughing, screaming, panicking and fighting, they watch the birth, development and maturation of a very special part of their relationship: the ability to connect over wine. This is the uncensored account of their tour through the great wine regions of France. By turns uproarious, poignant, and filled with cunning little details about wine, Corked is a book for any reader who has sought a connection with a complex family member or wanted to overcome the paralyzing terror of being faced with a restaurant wine list.

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Mostrando 1-5 de 21 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
This book is a memoir of a daughter who travelled around France to various vineyards with her eccentric father. I did enjoy this book although it is not what I expected. Don't expect to learn a lot about France in this book. Nor will this book educate you about French wines (There is some of that, further into the book). Although there is a fair amount of wine discussion in the book, the focus is largely on the father/daughter relationship. Both are temperamental. Now they are going to be trapped in a car and drinking together. Does this sound like a good plan to you? ( )
  Bcteagirl | Aug 6, 2011 |
This is a memoir about 26 year old daughter Kathryn and her father Philippe going on a wine trip through France together. ( )
  MsTarazz | Jan 30, 2011 |
Kathryn Borel goes off to France on a wine tasting trip with her oenophile father after she has a terrible car accident that has made her cognizant of her dad's mortality. But her sudden revelation about the fleeting nature of life isn't the only thing that she comes face to face with during this tour the breadth of France. She spends quite a lot of her time deconstructing the romantic relationship she's ended just before leaving as well. While she and her father do indeed travel around to different vineyards, this is more a journey to knowing and understanding each other, and at least in Kathryn's case, in understanding herself better. The wine vacation is simply the framework upon which hangs the tales of Kathryn's feelings and relationships.

This memoir is billed as the tale of a wine innocent daughter and her expert father learning about each other as much as about wine and vintners. Truly though, the information about wine and the trip itself is sparse and not terribly satisfying. Instead, the two relationships, between Kathryn and her father and Kathryn and ex-boyfriend Matthew, take center stage. Unfortunately, in the case of the father daughter dynamics, I'm not certain their relationship translated particularly sympathetically to the page. It is easy to see that Kathryn is reduced to childishness when around her domineering father but he is also reduced to a fairly childish caricature in these pages. The by-play between the father and daughter, which I suspect could be funny and entertaining in real life, limps along on the page. Inside jokes are only funny to those in the know and we readers aren't enough in the know here to recognize and appreciate those found here. When the narrative veers to Kathryn's relationship (or former relationship) with Matthew, it feels as if the reader is being dragged out of one story and into another one entirely, one only tangentially related to the original story. Somehow there had to be a way to connect the two threads and then weave them convincingly against the backdrop of Kathryn's life changing accident, but it's done so loosely that it loses what needs to be an effective, tight connection. Ultimately disappointing, this road trip used as therapy memoir might have been cathartic for Borel to write but therapy sessions aren't engrossing reading for anyone other than the subject(s) or therapists in training to read and this doesn't disprove that. ( )
  whitreidtan | Nov 2, 2010 |
This meandering memoir covered a father-daughter wine-tasting trip trip through France, but the location was the only appealing element of the book. Both the narraor and her fathercame across as selfish, self-involved, and immature. Between his tantrums, her childish sulks, and both of their inability to communicate like adults, the book was actually painful in places to read. The book seems to have no general purpose- no grand revelations or useful life messages or interesting stories emerge that would make spending time with these self-indulgent people worthwhile. I gave it 2 stars only for the bits of interesting wine trivia that popped up on occasion. ( )
1 vota ForeignCircus | Sep 4, 2010 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
At first I was excited about getting this book because I thought it had a lot in common with other books I enjoy reading - road trip, food oriented, memoirs, etc. Unfortunately as I read it, I found I didn't like it much at all. I found the author/narrator to be juvenile, narcissistic, and unlikeable. Ostensibly she goes with her father on this road trip to better understand him because she fears his mortality. In reality, what she seems to want is to make sure he listens to her and understands how he has failed her.

The father is also not particularly likeable, even though he is supposed to be charming. Late in the book, he reveals a significant event in his life. It would have been more interesting to hear more about this or even how it effected him more than the brief accounting we get. Perhaps the book would have been more interesting as a biography of the father rather than the memoir of the daughter.

One assumes that because it's a memoir, events took place in the order they happened, so perhaps this is a true recollection of the trip. However, it was neither particularly funny or particularly enlightening. If I had gotten this book from the library, I doubt I would have finished it. ( )
  julko | Jul 19, 2010 |
Mostrando 1-5 de 21 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
How do some books get published? In the case of Corked, it is apparent that if Kathryn Borel wasn't a radio producer for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, her memoir would not have seen the light of day. It seems the Hachette Book Group took a chance on Kathryn more for who she is than what she wrote.
 
Some readers may shy away from Borel's openness, but this book is unique precisely because it is Borel. With the audacious rage of a neglected child and the bold sharpness of the surgeon's blade, she dissects her very human relationship with her father. Then, hearts and bodies still open and beating, she invites us in for a glass of wine around the operating table. This takes courage.
 
The writer is so busy with her clamorous self-regard – her interior monologues are like a cross between Sylvia Plath and The Jerky Boys – that we want to tell her to slow down and enjoy herself. And her noisy disquiet is amplified by the fact that the trip itself is relatively uneventful. There are no surprises here – no flat tires, lost wallets, unexpected pregnancies, or crazed hitchhikers; none of the twists of fate that a really excellent travel memoir needs to mould its characters.
 
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When it comes to champagne and our family, my father has only one absolute rule: we do not drink it when we are sad.
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Biography & Autobiography. Cooking & Food. Nonfiction. HTML:

Meet Kathryn Borel, absurd bon vivant and daughter of duty. Now meet her father, Philippe, former chef, eccentric genius, and wine aficionado extraordinaire. Kathryn is like her father in every way but one: she doesn't get it when it comes to wine. And although Philippe has devoted untold parenting hours to delivering impassioned, oenological orations, she has managed to remain unenlightened. But after an accident and a death, Kathryn realizes that by shutting herself off to her father's greatest passion, she will never really know him. So, she proposes a drunken father-daughter road trip. As they drive through the country, meeting with vintners, touring vineyards, laughing, screaming, panicking and fighting, they watch the birth, development and maturation of a very special part of their relationship: the ability to connect over wine. This is the uncensored account of their tour through the great wine regions of France. By turns uproarious, poignant, and filled with cunning little details about wine, Corked is a book for any reader who has sought a connection with a complex family member or wanted to overcome the paralyzing terror of being faced with a restaurant wine list.

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