From Publishers Weekly
A colorful expatriate neighborhood of Italian Jews in post-apartheid Capetown is the setting for this charming if familiar novel of food, love and magic. Flamboyant Pasquale, a gifted baker and sausage maker, and Primo, a modest soothsayer, have been best friends since childhood. Even Primo's marriage to their other childhood friend (and Pasquale's lover), the beautiful Beatrice, doesn't pull them apart. But as the novel opens, Beatrice, after 20 years of marriage, has succumbed to Pasquale's entreaties and left her husband. Heartbroken, Primo lashes out with a halfhearted curse or two before lapsing into depression. His curses play out to spoil Pasquale's much-loved cooking and summon the Devil (surprise: he's a benign, beautiful angel). In addition to the love triangle, the novel reveals the histories of Pasquale's and Primo's families and the lives and loves of other neighborhood residents—Pasquale's sister, the brothel owner; her rival, the seamstress; the seamstress's lovers; the tattoo artist; the plastic surgeon; the venerated, poker-playing local doctor. While many sweet details of community life and a meticulous, respectful attention to the skills of all trades brighten the novel, the themes and language are familiar; the conclusion brings together many elements of the characters' fates but fails to imbue them with meaning. Still, those who prefer their world literature with a light touch will likely find much to enjoy.
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A seductive fable about the contest between good and evil, Schonstein's second novel, following
Skyline (2000), cloaks its heavy message within some of the most sensuous descriptions of food and drink since Laura Esquivel's
Like Water for Chocolate (1992) or Joanne Harris'
Chocolat (1999). Clairvoyant Primo Verona and his wife of 20 years, Beatrice, live within the bustling Italian Jewish community of Cape Town, initially formed by those who survived deportation to the camps following the German occupation of Italy in 1943. When Beatrice leaves him for their best friend, chef and bon vivant Pasquale, Primo uses his gift to cast a spell on Pasquale, turning his famous fruited bread bitter and his salami rancid. Then, in a mistake with dark ramifications for everyone, Primo inadvertently summons the Devil, a physically perfect figure with immense wings and shoulder-length curls. Although the serious themes of the novel are omnipresent--there are some horrific war scenes--it makes for surprisingly pleasurable reading, offering an unusual, well-written narrative and an appreciation of both the mystical and the sensual.
Joanne WilkinsonCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved