Reviewed by layawaydragon on

4 of 5 stars

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I signed up to review because the blurb was intriguing and unique. At first, I had no idea what I had gotten myself into and struggled. It didn’t hook me right away while feeling random and pointless.

Give it 50 pages though, give Thaniya 50 pages to introduce threads of her life and start weaving them together. 50 pages for a unique perspective and intersection that’s overlooked and missing from pop culture.

I was hooked by 35.

Spoonful Chronicles doesn’t follow a linear path. Different chapters start, revolve, or end on a dish or ingredient. Along with her rules of cooking there’s insight, humor, and quotables. It’s not a traditional narrative, Thaniya speaks to the reader and is aware she’s writing it all down.

~~There are some threads that feel unresolved, like her friend that ends up having a mental breakdown.
~~That and Thaniya’s “measuring mental illness” could’ve been handled better.
~~Love the sections about her college friend, their drama, and their falling out.
~~There’s a McDreamy. I LOVE how Thaniya described him. “Nose read for directions” is one of my favorite phrase that I won’t be forgetting anytime soon.
~~The revelations about her husband and their courtship towards the end made things just *click* for me.
~~Love the bringing the sleeping kids in from the car scene.
~~Thaniya with her kids and talking about her kids is adorable.
~~Totally understand the reflection and wondering how one ended up they way they did.
~~The Mango chapter about immigrating, especially the first passage was mesmerizing and informative.
~~It felt a tad long towards the end, but it’s worth it.
~~Love the ending, quite a powerful punch.

MEMORABLE QUOTES:

I entered the world of cooking the same way I entered my sex life. Tragically unprepared, but feverishly curious.


I outran a nightmare, losing all facility for dreaming along the way.


Cry me a river and I shall pollute it!


“Give the poor Iraqi man a break!” I say. “He has enough intolerable burdens to deal with as is, why should happy?”


Only your mother is willing to cook for you badly.


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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 19 April, 2017: Finished reading
  • 19 April, 2017: Reviewed