TongueTongue
Emotionally raw and erotically charged, Tongue is the story of the demise of an obsessive romance and a young chef's gourmet journey toward self-restoration and revenge.
When her boyfriend of seven years leaves her for another woman, Jeong Ji-won shuts down the cooking school she runs from their home and sinks deep into depression, losing her will to cook, her desire to eat, and even her ability to taste.
Returning to the kitchen of the Italian restaurant where her career began, she slowly rebuilds her life, rediscovering her appreciation of food and all its sensual pleasures. She also starts to devise a plan for a final, vengeful act of culinary seduction.
An erotically charged, elegantly written novel that marks the first publication in English of author Kyung-Ran Jo, a literary star in Korea who has earned comparisons to Haruki Murakami.
Emotionally raw and emphatically sensual, Tongue is the story of the demise of an obsessive romance and a woman's culinary journey toward self-restoration and revenge. When her boyfriend of seven years leaves her for another woman, the celebrated young chef Jung Ji-won shuts down the cooking school she ran from their home and sinks into deep depression, losing her will to cook, her desire to eat, and even her ability to taste. Returning to the kitchen of the I talian restaurant where her career first began, she slowly rebuilds her life, rediscovering her appreciation of food, both as nourishment and as sensual pleasure. She also starts to devise a plan for a final, vengeful act of culinary seduction.
Tongue is a voluptuous, intimate story of a gourmet relying on her food-centric worldview to emerge from heartbreak; a mesmerizing, delicately plotted novel at once shocking and profoundly familiar.
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- New York : Bloomsbury, 2009.
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