Praise for The Raw and the Cooked:
Harrison is the American Rabelais, and he is at his irreverent and excessive best in this collection.
John Skowles, San Diego Union-Tribune
Theres nothing false in The Raw and the Cooked. Its straight to the heart... and leaves you content and full but wanting more.
Robert Baldwin, Bloomsbury Review
What were reading about is a life voraciously lived... engrossment with the natural world, engorgement at its harvest plentiful, and engagement with just about any topic (principles of Zen, the merits of writers as varied as Kierkegaard and Gary Snyder, the restorative powers of walking).... Alternately breezy and dense, sometimes serious as a crusade and the next second seriously funny.
Steve Byrne, Detroit Free Press
For [Harrison], a great meal is a mindful act, a call to attend the sensual, while bad food is the least digestible aspect of a puritanical business culture that puts money, progress and other abstractions before lifes simple pleasures.... Such views have a long history in American lettersread Thoreau and Henry Miller.... His vivid language and comic sense earn him a place near the head of the literary table.
Chris Waddington, Minneapolis Star-Tribune
Like a fine meal, this book satisfies.
Anne Stephenson, Arizona Republic
Harrisons passion for foodand sexare matched by his muscular writing.
Janet K. Keeler, St. Petersburg Times
Calling The Raw and the Cooked a book about food is like calling The Old Man and the Sea a book about fishing.... Harrisons writing is full of power and passion.
Jim Carvalho, Tucson Weekly
Sophisticated and earthy... impossible to pigeonhole... Most of us will never be lucky enough to share a meal with this roving gourmand, but this volume provides a satisfying alternative.
Wendy Miller, Library Journal
By turns hysterically funny, heartbreaking, meditative, irreverent, mystical, and more fun than a double portion of ris de veau rotis with a slab of headcheese, a brace of game birds, and a coney dog.
Hour Detroit
A man of appetites... a trencherman of the soul... [Harrison] wears his erudition lightly. Whether musing about the poetry of Verlaine or the joys of Breton oysters, he never beats you over the head with his knowledge.... Harrison is a raconteur of the first order.
William Porter, Denver Post
To read this book is to come away convinced that Harrison is a flatout geniusone who devours life with intensity, living it roughly and full-scale, then distills his experiences into passionate, opinionated prose. Food, in this context, is more than food: It is a metaphor for life.
Wolf Schneider, Santa Fe New Mexican
A rumination on the unholy trinity of sex, death, and food, this long-awaited collection of gastronomic essays reads like the love child of M. F. K. Fisher and James Thorneon acid.
Publishers Weekly
The Raw and the Cooked provides a tantalizing, scrumptious read, a smorgasbord of the finest food writing, one thats entertaining, engaging, witty, and full of savoir-faire; all in a voice that reveals a man fully given over to the pursuit of the art of writing (and eating). Bon appetit!
Beef Torrey, Lincoln Journal-Star (Nebraska)
One of the most important authors to emerge from this country in the last fifty years... The Raw and the Cooked... is about more than food; it is about being human in a difficult time.... You will not read a book more genuine than this one.
Barry Graham, Chattanooga Times Free Press
Youll never find a person who savors every kind of foreign foodstuff with more orgasmic glee than Harrison. In his mind, good food, good sex, and good literature... are the only things that keep a sensible person going in this world.
Craig D. Lindsey, Houston Chronicle
A man of firm opinions and titanic appetites... Harrison is in search of the transcendent, whether in nature (trekking is the only pastime he seems to feel as passionate about as food) or on the plate. He finds it in intense flavors, the American landscape, his past, and his family: the subjects of most of his essays.... Delightful.
Kirkus Reviews
To call this a book about only food would be to narrow its scope. Although Harrison is knowledgeable about all kinds of fare, has read thousands of cookbooks and eaten in the worlds finest restaurants, he comes across as a man who simply likes to eat and enjoys his life and the company around him.
Parsippany Daily Record (NJ)
ALSO BY JIM HARRISON
Fiction
Wolf
A Good Day to Die
Farmer
Legends of the Fall
Warlock
Sundog
Dalva
The Woman Lit by Fireflies
Julip
The Road Home
The Beast God Forgot to Invent
Poetry
Plain Song
Locations
Outlyer
Letters to Yesenin
Returning to Earth
Selected & New Poems
The Theory and Practice of Rivers & New Poems
After Ikkyu & Other Poems
The Shape of the Journey: Collected Poems
Nonfiction
Just Before Dark
Off to the Side: A Memoir
Childrens Literature
The Boy Who Ran to the Woods
THE RAW AND THE COOKED
THE RAW AND THE COOKED
Adventures of a Roving Gourmand
Jim Harrison
Copyright 2001 by Jim Harrison
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Any members of educational institutions wishing to photocopy part or all of the work for classroom use, or publishers who would like to obtain permission to include the work in an anthology, should send their inquiries to Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 841 Broadway, New York, NY 10003.
These pieces have previously appeared, sometimes in slightly different form, in the, following magazines, to which grateful acknowledgment is made: Smart (New York): Eat or Die (published as Sporting Food), Meals of Peace and Restoration, Hunger, Real and Unreal, Then and Now, Consciousness Dining, The Tugboats of Costa Rica, Midrange Road Kill, The Panic Hole, Piggies Come to Market, The Fast Esquire (New York): What Have We Done with the Thighs?, The Days of Wine and Pig Hocks, One Foot in the Grave, Just Before Dark, Cooking Your Life, Ignoring Columbus, Eating Close to the Ground, Return of the Native, or Lighten Up, Lets Get Lost, Principles, The Last Best Place?, The Morality of Food, Contact, Coming to Our Senses, The 10,000-Calorie Diet, Walking the San Pedro, Back Home, Repulsion and Grace, Outlaw Cook, Unmentionable Cuisine, Heart Food in L.A., Fresh Southern Air, Borderlands, A Huge Hunger in Paris Mens Journal (New York): Thirty-three Angles on Eating French (published as Eating French), American Food Journal Revue des Deux Mondes (Paris) and Kermit Lynch Wine Merchant Newsletter: Wine Beaux Arts (Paris): Wild Creatures (published as Jim Harrison & Grard Oberl Food Correspondence) Brick (Toronto): Meatballs Grard Oberls letters to Jim Harrison in Wild Creatures were translated by Diana Odasso.
Published simultaneously in Canada
Printed in the United States of America
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