cover image GOING WITH THE GRAIN: A Wandering Bread Lover Takes a Bite Out of Life

GOING WITH THE GRAIN: A Wandering Bread Lover Takes a Bite Out of Life

Susan Seligson, . . Simon & Schuster, $24 (240pp) ISBN 978-0-7432-0081-3

Seligson's no loafer; her quest for bread—from French baguettes to lab-crafted field rations courtesy of the U.S. military—takes her around the world and across America, five countries and six U.S. cities in all as she explores cultural difference and identity through a common creation. As Seligson explains, "My lifelong love affair with bread has less to do with crust, crumb, and the vagaries of sourdough cultures and more to do with bread as a reflection of people's varied beliefs, daily lives, and blood memories." Serious stuff, but Seligson—best known as a journalist and children's book author (Amos: The Story of an Old Dog and His Couch)—leavens this offering with keen observations and a wicked sense of humor. She starts off in Morocco, where Fesi women rise at dawn to prepare the dough that will be baked —as it has for centuries—in huge communal hearths. Stops in the U.S. include Eunice's Country Kitchen in Huntsville, Ala., where the spitfire proprietress helps maintain the down-home feel of the former cotton-farming town turned NASA hub by serving up biscuits, ham and red-eye gravy, and the Wonder Bread plant in Biddeford, Maine, which emits no discernible smell. Seligson ends her tour in Paris, where, after a decade-long denigration of traditional technique, legislation was passed to protect and maintain the art of the boulanger. Seligson's debut essay collection is as smart and evocative as it often is laugh-out-loud funny. (Nov.)