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On a vacation
with the family in Barbados, Mel and Bob Blanchard (of the Vermont-based
Blanchard & Blanchard
specialty foods company) stumble upon a tiny restaurant/shack on a Caribbean
beach.
So begins the Blanchards' 10-year pursuit of the illusory notion
of "island
time." In a literary heartbeat, they abandon the "concrete jungle" that
was Vermont and open a restaurant on a little-known island in the British West
Indies called Anguilla ("rhymes with vanilla"). Narrated by Mel Blanchard,
A Trip to the Beach dispels tired notions of the Caribbean--the steel drums,
the lush landscapes, and acres of swaying palm trees--and instead focuses on
the understated elegance and easy rhythms of the sublimely "flat, and
scrubby" island. Though lacking the richness and finesse of Frances Mayes,
and the wit and wisdom of Peter Mayle, Mel Blanchard nonetheless forges a new
path in travel writing as the Martha Stewart of the Caribbean. A remarkably
intuitive and inspired chef, Mel writes poignant passages on running a kitchen
in Anguilla. Here she exposes the meat of the story, sharing her many outrageous
adventures--how to cater to pampered and demanding guests, how to cook for
a full restaurant in the darkest of island night with no electricity, how to
prepare for recurring and utterly devastating hurricanes that wipe out your
business. In these chapters the writing is as good as her cooking--inspiring,
colorful, and easily digestible. Although she sometimes relies heavily on well-worn
cliches and expresses naive and rather privileged assumptions--"Why would
anyone choose to live surrounded by concrete and traffic rather than fishing
boats, water and palm trees?"--discerning readers will see the true nature
of this tiny island--a place of simplistic beauty that struggles to maintain
its independence while it depends on tourism for its livelihood. With a strange
concoction of anecdotes, island politics, recipes, and sweet memories, the
Blanchards seduce readers with the allure of "island time," bringing
Anguilla home to the rest of us.
--Daphne Durham
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