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Home Made: A Story of Grief, Groceries, Showing Up--and What We Make When We Make Dinner

Home Made: A Story of Grief, Groceries, Showing Up--and What We Make When We Make Dinner

by Liz Hauck

The Dial Press ·2021 ·400 pages ·Memoir
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66/99
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65/99

Critics

Near the Top

67/99

Readers

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Scholars

96/99

Rating

34/99

Volume

78/99

Rating

56/99

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About This Book

A woman honors her father's legacy by teaching a cooking class in a home for youth in state care--a powerful memoir about the small acts of showing up that transform our lives and how making food can make community. Liz Hauck and her dad had a plan to start a weekly cooking program in a residential home for teenage boys in state care, which was run by the human services agency he co-directed. When her father died unexpectedly after a brief illness, Liz decided to attempt the cooking project without him. She didn't know what to expect volunteering with court-involved youth, but as a high school teacher she knew that teenagers are drawn to food-related activities, and as a daughter, she believed that if she and the kids made even a single dinner together she could check one box off of her father's long, unfinished to-do list. This is the story of what happened around the table, and how one dinner became one hundred dinners. An intimate account of humorous and heartbreaking conversations, and a vivid account of the clumsy choreography of cooking with other people, Home Made is a sharply observed and honestly told story about how a kitchen can be both safe and dangerous; how even the short journey from kitchen to table can be perilous. Each chapter explores the interconnectedness of flavor, memory, culture, and life and offers a glimpse into the ways we behave when we are hungry and the food we crave when we seek comfort. Home Made is a tender and vivid portrait of poverty and abundance, vulnerability and strength, estrangement and connection. It is a memoir about the radical grace we discover when we consider ourselves bound together in community and a piercing investigation of the essential question: Who are we to each other?


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Reviews

"Because she writes with such unvarnished clarity and pragmatism, sudden moments of tenderness burst open on the page ..."

Kate Christensen· The New York Times Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Home Made is not a prescription for sweeping social change or a story of a white woman saving young men of color (or even herself)."

Katie Noah Gibson· Shelf Awareness Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Her writing captures the personalities and voices of the young men so clearly as they request recipes, tease her for acting like a teacher, and live in the space between childhood and the adult world ..."

Laura Chanoux· Booklist Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Hauck's sensitive memoir honors the boys she nourished."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

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