From Publishers Weekly
"Did you ever think about all that goes into a bottle of wine?" Weiss set out to answer his wife's question and wound up writing a 39-day series for the
San Francisco Chronicle in 2004, now expanded into book form. It starts with his November 2001 meeting with Don and Rhonda Carano—the visionary proprietors who built Ferrari-Carano Winery in Sonoma County, Calif., with their Nevada gaming fortune—and ends with the wine's market debut in May 2003. Weiss elicits revelatory disclosures, both personal and professional, from sources including the intuitive, unreserved grape farmer Steve Domenchelli; the intense, secretive winemaker George Bursick; the ambitious vineyard workers from the Mexican village of El Charco; and an unnamed contact he calls "Deep Cork." An admiring yet unflinching storyteller, Weiss weaves a drama of failures and fears, tragedies and triumphs, births and deaths, ego and jealousy. His narrative shares trade secrets, tricks and gossip, and describes in detail the meticulous crafting of corks, the sun-baked cultivation of grapes, the backbreaking work of harvest, the finesse of fermenting and blending wine, and the aggressive strategy needed to take it to market. This "biography" of the 2002 Ferrari-Carano Fumé Blanc is a sweet pleasure.
Agent, David Vigliano. (June) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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From Booklist
Weiss tracks the production of a single bottle of California wine from the vine to its appearance in restaurants and stores. In this instance the featured bottle holds a 2002 Fume Blanc from Ferrari-Carano, a Sonoma Valley winery. Weiss may begin with just a bottle, but he ends up with a vast human drama of compelling characters: the thrice-married lawyer-gaming executive, Don Carano, who owns the vineyard; Steve Domenichelli, who manages the vineyards carefully; George Bursick, the rock 'n' roll-loving winemaker; Steve Meisner, the marketer on whom commercial success depends; and Jaime Ruiz, one of the workers who tend the vines and bring in the harvest. Their true stories hold more lively interest than any imaginary
Dynasty or
Sideways characters. Months of work, worry, labor, and investment culminate in the wine's ultimate release to consumers. In common with other arts, much turns on the opinion of inordinately powerful media critics whose assignment of a rating number makes or breaks sales. This is an exceptionally readable account of the state of California's wine industry at the start of the new millennium.
Mark KnoblauchCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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