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Burn the Place
Burn the Place: A Memoir | Iliana Regan
4 posts | 7 read | 11 to read
Michelin-starred chef Iliana Regan's (Elizabeth, Kitsune) culinary memoir, chronicling this intensely driven chef's upbringing in rural Northwest Indiana, her battle with addiction, and the development of her career in urban restaurants.
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review
Chelsea.Poole
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Mehso-so

Sadly, this one didn‘t work for me. I think it was mostly because I tried to read it during a super busy time and I needed to dedicate more attention to the nuances in the three separate timelines. These three interconnected stories feature women who are at the mercy of the men in their lives, and take place over centuries. I may revisit this sometime since it was an #auldlangspine pick from the trusted @TheKidUpstairs

Ruthiella I‘ll definitely keep timing in mind when I read this. I really liked her previous book 6mo
TheKidUpstairs I'm sorry this one didn't work for you! I love Evie Wyld, but she is definitely one you have to be in the right mood and headspace for. 6mo
78 likes2 comments
review
Chelsea.Poole
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Mehso-so

I can‘t enthusiastically recommend this one, unfortunately. Regan, a Michelin star chef, writes about her childhood, gender and sexuality, and then there‘s much about relationships that come and go and I got lost in that muddle. There‘s a lot in this section about substance abuse and reckless behavior but then I became interested again in the restaurant scenes. And when she eventually becomes a chef and writes about food I was hooked.

74 likes1 stack add
review
8little_paws
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Mehso-so

Getting caught up on the nba longlist backlog this year.... that's my ONLY reading goal-- no challenges or anything. This memoir was just ok imo. A lot of chef memoirs go: food memories from childhood, teenage or ya drug and alcohol abuse, success as chef and this was no different. Edward Lee is still the chef to read imo. Also she comes across as kind of a jerk boss sometimes too :/

review
Christine
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Pickpick

I‘ve read so little lately! 😫 For many reasons, including ones annoying, exhausting, productive, hopeful, festive. But finally I‘ve finished my first book in a bit, and it was SUCH a good one. This is a fantastic (National Book Award longlisted) memoir about Midwest childhood, gender, sexuality, addiction, chef life, and more. Regan has a straightforward but artful writing style that I really enjoyed. Highly recommended.

39 likes1 stack add