01-20-2009, 02:11 PM
It's not trivial, it's a good thread. 
I love descriptions of food and/or weather in the stories.
While I often don't feel a compulsion to prepare and eat what's described, yep...my appetite often gets whetted, lol.
One thing I don't ever crave is "tea and toast." Egad, that's already old. ;p
In "Reception at Hightower," the heroine basically never eats. She's recuperating from a nervous breakdown, is in a hostile environment (of course), is quite possibly teetering on the edge of another nervous collapse...and all she consumes are coffee and cigarettes.
No wonder she's half anemic and hallucinatory...
I can't help wondering how much of the authors' own attitudes towards food factors in; probably quite a bit. Some of them must have been flat-out anorectic.
A really good Gothic with lots of food references is We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson. Someday I'm going to make a 2-layer cake [1 chocolate, 1 vanilla] decorated with pink frosting and golden foil leaves about the edges, and call it "The Merrycat Cake."
And no, it won't contain any..."additives"...such as that found in certain sugar bowls - lol.

I love descriptions of food and/or weather in the stories.

One thing I don't ever crave is "tea and toast." Egad, that's already old. ;p
In "Reception at Hightower," the heroine basically never eats. She's recuperating from a nervous breakdown, is in a hostile environment (of course), is quite possibly teetering on the edge of another nervous collapse...and all she consumes are coffee and cigarettes.

I can't help wondering how much of the authors' own attitudes towards food factors in; probably quite a bit. Some of them must have been flat-out anorectic.
A really good Gothic with lots of food references is We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson. Someday I'm going to make a 2-layer cake [1 chocolate, 1 vanilla] decorated with pink frosting and golden foil leaves about the edges, and call it "The Merrycat Cake."
