'Brilliantly clever' <b><i>Irish Times</i></b>
'Thoroughly enjoyable' <b>Ayseguel Savas</b>
<b>An evening of perfect preparation. A night of uninvited chaos.</b>
For the hostess, food has always been about growing up. From the pancakes your grandmother made you, dolloped with jam, to the salty glug of your first oyster. Now, poised at the brink of midlife, the hostess prepares for a dinner party in her new apartment. With a hunger for the finer things in life, she folds linen napkins into neat triangles, arranges wildflowers for the table and puts on a jazz playlist the projects effortless cool.
But her composure begins to falter when her guests arrive drunk and late, downing bottles of her perfectly cooled wine and trailing water over the floor. Here comes the chain-smoking professor who never says the right thing, the husband glued to his smartphone, the wife who makes a secret pass at your boyfriend.
As small talk and social preening give way to sexual tension and lost inhibitions, the hostess struggles to maintain control over an evening far beyond her wildest imaginings.
<b>__________</b>
'Very funny, very stylish and very moving' <b>Adam Thirlwell</b>
'Irresistible' <i><b>New Statesman</b></i>
'Clever, amusing' <b><i>Daily Mail</i></b>
'Astute, witty and as pleasure as a case of Cremant' <b>Claire Powell</b>
'Beautiful writing' <i><b>Stylist</b></i>
Reviews / Votes
Very funny, very stylish and very moving. Teresa Praeauer is a novelist of unusual elegance and charm - who can make the reader sadly aware of time passing even while leaving them delightedly hungry -- Adam Thirlwell, author of The Future Future Deliciously unsettling and thoroughly enjoyable. It's so much fun to see this meticulously planned dinner party go wrong -- Ayseguel Savas, author of The Anthropologists Astute observations on the absurd theatre of aspirational living in the age of social media abound in Teresa Praeauer's Cooking in the Wrong Century. Culture, under Praeauer's gaze, is a mood that can be blurred by candlelight and the Thelonious Monk Septet: it's irresistible, disorienting * New Statesman * Sharp but subtle humour . . . witty translation . . . brilliantly clever. Nothing described in the novel can, with complete certainty, be said to have happened * Irish Times * Clever, amusing and delightfully compact. To be consumed in one sitting, it pairs wonderfully with a glass or four of fizz * Daily Mail * Every fear you've ever had about hosting a dinner party crops up in this half dream, half choose-your-own-adventure, in which the events of the evening are affected by minor differences: which guests arrive first, and which are late? Who has had a drink on the way? Do they take their shoes off at the door? The characters' conversation follows similar strange, winding tangents to the surreal narrative. Get the cremant open * GQ * Astute, witty and as pleasurable as a case of Cremant. An irresistible novel - I loved it -- Claire Powell, author of At the Table Beautiful writing and an interesting concept * Stylist * There's a sensibility akin to Vincenzo Latronico's Perfection in everyone's obsession with names and cultural touchstones, as they share selfies on social media (#FoodPorn #BestFriendsForever). The tone of this moreish story swings between sadness and satire . . . By the end of the evening, when things spiral outward and the police come calling, only one question remains. "Is there any more Cremant?"' * Guardian * Takes on gender roles, social disappointments and the memories evoked by food * TLS * An entertaining, finely observed chamber play and a great culinary reading pleasure -- Nora von Westphalen * ELLE * Splices fleeting sincerity with gleeful satire all while digging up the true intents of Vienna's thin upper crust . . . Praeauer is both witty and wise; she has a gift for sharp dialogue * The Berliner * An elegantly written, deliciously sardonic read which I very much enjoyed. The discomforting gap between the fantasy of a convivial dinner party and the awkward reality of tricky, unappreciative guests was beautifully observed. The witty dissection of social media was scalpel-sharp and very entertaining -- Jenny Linford, author of The Missing Ingredient Unusual and compelling . . . an intelligent social farce about a dinner party * Spectator Takeaway Newsletter * Astutely analyses social interaction and presents it in a humorous and ironic way -- Laura Sodano * Vogue Germany * With her well-seasoned, original menu Teresa Praeauer proves herself to be an amusingly sophisticated hostess and stimulating companion at this literary dinner -- Irene Prugger * Wiener Zeitung * Teresa Praeauer is one of the brightest candles on the cake of contemporary German literature . . . This is breathtakingly funny, comical and very, very insightful -- Denis Scheck * MDR Best New Books * Hardly ever has such an intellectually precise novel about taste been written -- Paul Jandl * NZZ * Entertaining, witty, amusing and clever. It offers plenty of material for the next table conversation -- Annalena Esser * WDR3 Gutenberg's World *
Language
Place of publication
Dimensions
Height: 221 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 21 mm
Weight
ISBN-13
978-1-80533-177-3 (9781805331773)
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Schweitzer Classification
Teresa Praeauer is a prize-winning Austrian author, essayist and playwright. Having studied German Literature and Language in Austria and Germany, she received a Master's Degree in Philosophy and in Fine Arts. She is a literary columnist for German newspapers and magazines, and lectures at universities internationally. Most recently, Teresa Praeauer was selected to be writer-in-residence at Deutsches Haus at New York University. She is a member of the Berlin Academy of Arts and the recipient of numerous awards for her books, including the 2017 Erich Fried Prize and the 2022 Ben Witter Prize. Cooking in the Wrong Century is her first novel to be translated into English and won the highly prestigious 2024 Bremer Literaturpreis.