- Title: Hungry: What Eighty Ravenous Guys Taught Me about Life, Love and the Power of Good Food
- Author: Darlene Barnes
- Pages: 272
- Publisher (Publication Date): Hyperion (August 6, 2013)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10, ISBN-13 or ASIN: 1401324770
- Download File Format:EPUB
“The book is as much about nourishment as it is food. Barnes’ affection for the fraternity brothers carries the narrative. . . . A heartening memoir of good food and tough love.”
–Kirkus Reviews
Newly arrived in Seattle, Darlene Barnes stumbles on a job ad for a cook at the Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity on the University of Washington campus, a prospect most serious food professionals would automatically reject. But Barnes envisions something other than kegs and corn dogs; she sees an opportunity to bring fresh, real food to an audience accustomed to “Asian Surprise” and other unidentifiable casseroles dropped off by a catering service. And she also sees a chance to reinvent herself, by turning a maligned job into meaningful work of her own creation: “I was the new girl and didn’t know or care about the rules.”
Naively expecting a universally appreciative audience, Barnes finds a more exasperatingly challenging environment: The kitchen is nasty, the basement is scary, and the customers are not always cooperative. Undaunted, she gives as good as she gets with these foul-mouthed and irreverent–but also funny and sensitive–guys. Her passion for real food and her sharp tongue make her kitchen a magnet for the brothers, new recruits, and sorority girls tired of frozen dinners.
Laugh-out-loud funny and poignant, Hungry offers a female perspective on the real lives of young men, tells a tale of a woman’s determined struggle to find purpose, and explores the many ways that food feeds us.