
Selinger's new book is Cellar Rat: My Life in the Restaurant Underbelly.
At Electric Lit she tagged seven titles about women and food, including:
Same As It Ever Was by Claire LombardoRead about another book on Selinger's list.
New York Times-bestselling author Claire Lombardo opens her fresh novel, Same As It Ever Was, in a grocery store; there, protagonist Julia Ames runsinto an old friend, Helen Russo, while shopping for the ingredients to make crab cakes for her husband’s birthday. Russo, an older woman who had been, for a time, a motherly figure to Ames, comes alive in later chapters, and through acts of cooking. Food, in fact, punctuates the book’s main events. Crab cakes: celebratory for a 60th birthday. Later, an apricot galette will set an affair in motion. Both Ames and Russo have entrenched domestic roles, and their work in the kitchen is at once ancillary and important. They are making something, feeding someone, memorializing something. For these characters, who exist in a world where limits are drawn and bound by the more powerful people around them, there is a certain freedom here, in a place where the rules are theirs and theirs alone.
--Marshal Zeringue