cover image John Saturnall’s Feast

John Saturnall’s Feast

Lawrence Norfolk. Grove, $25 (416p) ISBN 978-0-8021-2051-9

Food, history, and romance add layers of flavor to Norfolk’s (In the Shape of a Boar) lush new novel, his first in a decade, about an accused witch’s son who becomes a noble family’s “Top Chef” during the English Civil War. Alternating protagonist-hero John Saturnall’s charmingly antique recipes with the narrative of his occasionally brutal life, Norfolk depicts 17th-century England as a land savaged by political turmoil and religious persecutors. While just a boy, John runs away with his mother from a village mob, taking refuge in a place known as Buccla’s Wood, where she teaches him about the earth’s bounty, but then dies before revealing all her secrets. John soon finds himself tied to a saddle and transported across the Vale to Buckland Manor. There, he works his way up from kitchen boy to “Master Cook,” his culinary gifts blossoming along with his feelings for Lucretia Fremantle, daughter of the lord of the manor. John and Lucretia revive the feast that brings together highborn and low, rich and poor. Despite their efforts, warring factions manage to cause mayhem at the manor, leaving John with the unhappy task of preparing a wedding banquet for Lucretia and her cruel cousin. Artfully told with folkloric undertones, Norfolk’s tale features bruised dreamers seeking sensory respite from their abusers in settings ranging from the kitchen to the battlefield. Known for intellectual prose and complex plots, Norfolk this time out attempts to interweave time and senses, reality and myth, rewarding steadfast readers with savory recipes and a bittersweet upstairs-downstairs love story. Agent: Carole Blake, Blake Friedmann. (Sept.)