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Every Day in Tuscany: Seasons of an Italian Life |  | Author: Frances Mayes Publisher: Broadway Category: Book
List Price: $25.00 Buy New: $14.55 as of 7/31/2010 04:41 CDT details You Save: $10.45 (42%)
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Seller: BRILANTI BOOKS Rating: 94 reviews Sales Rank: 6527
Format: Deckle Edge Media: Hardcover Pages: 320 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.9 x 1.1
ISBN: 0767929829 Dewey Decimal Number: 945.5 EAN: 9780767929820 ASIN: 0767929829
Publication Date: March 9, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Review Kim Sunée Reviews Every Day in Tuscany Kim Sunée is the author of Trail of Crumbs: Hunger, Love, and the Search for Home. "The Bard of Tuscany" (New York Times) is back and better than ever. Two decades have passed since the purchase of Bramasole, Frances Mayes’s first Italian adventure into the meaning of home, made famous in Under the Tuscan Sun and Bella Tuscany. In Every Day in Tuscany, her third beautifully rendered memoir, Mayes generously serves up another delicious helping. She continues to contemplate the satisfaction of a life created by one’s own hard work, but also celebrates the joys of the piazza, reminisces on her South Georgia roots, reveals her love of architecture and painting, and is especially hungry to follow the trail (which she has generously mapped out for us) of Renaissance painter Luca Signorelli. After transforming Bramasole, you’d think that Mayes would have had enough of repairs and renovations, but she expands the idea of belonging with the purchase of a mountainside cottage. One day, as she and husband, Ed, are picking blackberries on a rugged slope above Cortona, Mayes writes of being "fatally attracted" to a "lonesome beauty," a partially collapsed stone-roof cottage. This new home becomes a place of comfort, especially when something shifts, when "one glorious summer evening at Bramasole," Mayes writes, "something unexpected intruded on this paradise." Enchanted by the simple life, a life lived in accordance with the cycles of the sun and moon, Mayes tells her story through the seasons of a country and those of the heart. Winter is about restoring privacy, summer for reading, moonlight swims, watermelon and plum crostata. Mostly, though, the seasons are made up of days meant for being. She admires the Italians for their ease and grace of pure existence. "How do Italian friends naturally keep the jouissance they were born with?" she wonders. Since Mayes is a poet first, her prose is infused with startling and indelible moments, and she will always inspire you to cook something. Luckily, there are recipes for everything from Melva’s Peach Pie to Risotto with White Truffles, as well as mouthwatering menus, including Roasted Garlic with Walnuts and Guinea Hen with Pancetta. Of the choreography of the kitchen, she writes, "meat glistens, lettuces float, you sneeze, I sing oh, my love, my darling, and dough rises in soft moons the size of my cupped hand as planet earth tilts us toward dinner." People are always eating in Mayes’s world, and eating well. But good food is essential for a good life, which includes travel and the private discovery of something no less significant than a new star. On watching a couple from Milan eat a midday meal consisting of a full antipasto platter, risotto, then steaks, she writes, "Those are delicious moments for the traveler--a fine lunch with someone you love, poring over the The Blue Guide and Gambero Rosso, a weekend to explore a new place and each other." More than anything, Every Day in Tuscany is a book for all travelers, those hungry hearts craving a lesson in living life to the fullest, whether at home or on the road. "It is paradoxical but true," she tells us, "that something that takes you out of yourself also restores you to yourself with a greater freedom.... The excitement of exploration sprang me from a life I knew how to live into a challenging space where I was forced--and overjoyed--to invent each new day." With Mayes as our luminous North Star, we can navigate our way to a place where--if we are lucky--we will choose the road less-traveled, find our own rugged mountainside, and become part of the landscape, perhaps even find a sense of self, if not a place to call home.
Product Description In this sequel to her New York Times bestsellers Under the Tuscan Sun and Bella Tuscany, the celebrated "bard of Tuscany" (New York Times) lyrically chronicles her continuing, two decades-long love affair with Tuscany's people, art, cuisine, and lifestyle. Frances Mayes offers her readers a deeply personal memoir of her present-day life in Tuscany, encompassing both the changes she has experienced since Under the Tuscan Sun and Bella Tuscany appeared, and sensuous, evocative reflections on the timeless beauty and vivid pleasures of Italian life. Among the themes Mayes explores are how her experience of Tuscany dramatically expanded when she renovated and became a part-time resident of a 13th century house with a stone roof in the mountains above Cortona, how life in the mountains introduced her to a "wilder" side of Tuscany--and with it a lively engagement with Tuscany's mountain people. Throughout, she reveals the concrete joys of life in her adopted hill town, with particular attention to life in the piazza, the art of Luca Signorelli (Renaissance painter from Cortona), and the pastoral pleasures of feasting from her garden. Moving always toward a deeper engagement, Mayes writes of Tuscan icons that have become for her storehouses of memory, of crucible moments from which bigger ideas emerged, and of the writing life she has enjoyed in the room where Under the Tuscan Sun began. With more on the pleasures of life at Bramasole, the delights and challenges of living in Italy day-to-day and favorite recipes, Every Day in Tuscany is a passionate and inviting account of the richness and complexity of Italian life.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 94
a Leisurely and Loving Stroll Though Tuscany with Frances Mayes February 26, 2010 Alan L. Chase (Boston, MA) 35 out of 39 found this review helpful
Almost twenty years ago, the publication of Frances Mayes' "Under the Tuscan Sun" signaled the dawn of a new era in the perennial love affair between American travelers and all things Tuscan. This month, she continues her string of fascinating memoirs with "Every Day in Tuscany - Seasons of An Italian Life."
I am one of those Americans who has fallen under the spell of Tuscany - Firenze, Siena, Chianti, the Ponte Vecchio, the three versions of Michelangelo's David that can be found within Florence, the Duoma, the Uffizi. I absorbed the sights, sounds and flavors of this book with great gusto. If, after reading Mayes' latest offering, you are not tempted to book a trip to Italy this summer, then I will be surprised.
The structure of this latest memoir is set between the bookends of Mayes' arrival with her poet husband, Ed, in Cortona for their annual season in Tuscany at her beloved villa of Bramasole and their departure for their winter home in North Carolina. In her chronicling of the intervening months, she leads her readers down a leisurely path that introduces them to some of the colorful characters in town, her life-embracing neighbors, the kitchens of some of the best cooks in the world, and the vineyards and olive groves of the surrounding hillside towns.
Another thread that weaves together her meandering narratives is her love for the paintings of Luca Signorelli. She and Ed visit many Tuscan towns to have another look at some of her favorite Signorelli paintings and frescoes. Spicing up the pages of each chapter are recipes that Mayes has gleaned from treasured Italian friends, and words and phrases from the colorful Italian language. Her use of these phrases is wonderfully instructive, rather than intrusive.
She describes in loving detail some wonderful places I look forward to visiting - townsal like Urbino, Citta di Castello, Sansepolchro, Umbertide, Perugia.
When she first made the investment in the crumbling Bramasole, Mayes was regrouping after a divorce. The town folks embraced her - but cautiously. Along the way, there have been occasional indications that she was still viewed as an outsider. But the anecdotes she shares in this latest memoir make it clear that as a byproduct of her investment in the community of Cortona - and in her serving an evangelist for the ethos and frame of mind that is Tuscany - the Tuscans have now embraced her wholeheartedly as a valued member of the community and family. She describes the subtle growth and evolution of her own mind set about Tuscany - its people, its foods, its wines, its history, its joys and challenges.
This book is a total delight - like a warm and comforting taste of freshly pressed extra virgin olive oil. I encourage you to read it if you love Tuscany - or are open to being seduced by its multi-sensory beauty and charming homeliness.
Enjoy.
Abbondanza!
Al
Like living in Tuscany February 25, 2010 KArns (NY) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I am not a huge fan of memoirs, but loved Under the Tuscan Sun so much that I decided to read another book from Mayes. The first few chapters were a little slow, but after that I became thoroughly engrossed in the story. I have never been to Italy, but Mayes does such an excellent job of describing not only the details of the homes and landscapes, but also the traditions, activities and daily routines of life in Tuscany that I really felt like I was there with her. I really enjoyed how she interspersed Italian words into the text. She also included numerous recipes, which I look forward to trying. Mayes really captured the lifestyle there. It only increased my desire to visit the country. At the end of the book, when Mayes and her husband return to their home in the US for several months, I actually felt sad - as if I was leaving too. The book gives readers an escape from the stressful and hectic lives so common these days - even if it's just for a little while.
Lovely addition to the Tuscany collection by Frances Mayes March 7, 2010 Resips (San Diego, CA USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Frances Mayes, author of a series of books on her life in Tuscany, has penned another volume in the series. The newest, "Every Day in Tuscany: Seasons of an Italian Life," is a charming account of her present-day life in Tuscany and her travels through Italy.
Mayes' home in Tuscany, Bramasole, was an abandoned thirteenth-century farmhouse in the mountains near Cortona that she renovated. She chronicles the seasons she and her husband spend in Italy, early spring through summer, ending with her return to her home in the U.S. in the late fall.
In this book, she and her husband branch out to explore Umbria and the Marche. She is on a quest for works of art by Luca Signorelli and his teacher, Piero della Francesca. Along the way, she meets the residents of the regions and manages to eat her way through the menus she encounters.
One of the delights repeated in this book is a series of recipes from the areas she visits. They sound so good that you are torn whether to continue read to read the book, or put it on the kitchen counter and cook the latest recipe she offers.
Whichever you decide to do, you will enjoy the fruits of this latest volume in Mayes' saga of Tuscany and its environs. It is a delight and a welcome diversion from the harsh realitites of life today.
Every Day In Tuscany Without Leaving Home March 19, 2010 Sheryl Turping (Bellingham, WA United States) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
No one writes better than Mayes when it comes to putting you in the moment. Along with her I sat at Placido's table, lay in the grass at Fonte delle Foglie and watched the shooting stars, picked the still warmed by the sun pomodori and was elbow deep in flour at Il Falconiere. Grazie Frances for another (inter)national treasure!
Another perfect season in Italy... March 13, 2010 atmj (Rochester, NY USA) 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Having read under the Tuscan Sun and Bella Tuscany and having her book In Tuscany (haven't read it yet) this book choice was a natural.
LYRICALLY WRITTEN BUT SOMETIMES OVERWHELMING:
For some reason this book was more dense to read at the beginning, than I remember the previous books.
Frances Mayes writes lyrically and tries to capture what she experiences as a poet. Sometimes if that is done a bit too often in a paragraph it can be hard to understand, you lose her train of thought. After a time either she lightens up or you get used to it. I'm not sure which was the case. However, this does not mean, I did not thoroughly enjoy the book. She does a great job of capturing a feeling and that is the whole point..
ART PLAYS A GREATER PART IN THIS BOOK THAN PREVIOUS ONES:
I found it interesting that she spoke of Art; Luca Signorelli's specifically in this book. I don't think I have ever read about someone's experiences specifically looking at paintings. It was interesting, but since I had an advanced reader's edition, there were no included visuals. However, I think the visuals were going to just be the route she followed through Italy to see these paintings. Ideally you would at least want some idea of what she was looking at when describing the paintings. At some point, I looked them up on the internet, but it was not the same and not as enjoyable as the rest of the book.
RECIPES INCLUDED:
I like that she has continued to include recipes in this book, though I think there are less (didn't count) than previous books, but, they seemed a bit more possible for the typical American chef.
MORE GRACIOUS CHARACTERIZATIONS:
In the past, I have critiqued the author for being a bit negative in her characterizations of people, especially houseguests and this book is much more gracious than previous versions in this regard. Even where there was a very negative situation, she took the high road...As widely read as I'm sure she is, this is the best way to go. The others don't have voices.
ITALIAN:
I don't speak Italian and I'm unlikely to learn. I wished when the author used an Italian term, she would always provide translations, or at least explain a term. . I felt I lost the meaning of a important passage, as I didn't understand the Italian. Or maybe I missed the fact that the translation was provided. This needs to be obvious. Sometimes in the past, I have learned a foreign phrase that captures a unique situation completely, so that phrase becomes the one I use. I think sometimes this was happening with the author and not having the same experiences I felt like I was missing it.
FONTE DELLE FOGLIE: THE NEW PLACE
The author speaks of Fonte delle Foglie, their new place several times in this book, which takes you a bit off guard as it is an unknown to me as a reader. More information would be nice. Hope it means another book.
IN SUMMARY:
Thoroughly enjoyed the book. Would have enjoyed it even more if the author did some of the things I mentioned above. However I still rate it at 5 and now that I realized she has even more out, I'm going to scoop those up as well.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 94
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