I really enjoyed her fiction work, so in comparison, this collection of essays seems fairly bland. It’s okay if you want to read the musings of a young, single white American woman living in New York City, but it’s nothing groundbreaking, distinctive or even particularly memorable. There’s some humor to it, but I didn’t find it laugh out loud funny. Passable entertainment.
Dec 18 2015
I Was Told There’d Be Cake by Sloane Crosley
- By Doreen Sheridan in Doreen, Essay, Humor, Non-fiction
-
December 18, 2015
Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2015/12/18/i-was-told-thered-be-cake-by-sloane-crosley/
Leave a Reply to Doreen Sheridan Cancel reply
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Recent Posts
- Tantalizing Tales — January 2026 — Part Five January 29, 2026
- Murder Before I Do by Rosie A Point and Charles Timmerman January 28, 2026
- Initial Condition by Ian Domowitz (EXCERPT) January 27, 2026
- Precious Metal by Darcy Van Poelgeest & Ian Bertram January 26, 2026
- Tantalizing Tales — January 2026 — Part Four January 23, 2026
- Wandering Souls and other stories by Philip Caputo January 22, 2026
- Pig Wife by Abbey Luck January 21, 2026
- Upcoming Speculative Fiction by Beloved Authors! January 20, 2026
- A Plague of Angels by P.F. Chisholm January 18, 2026
- Tantalizing Tales — January 2026 — Part Three January 16, 2026
Contributors
Categories
Tag Cloud
Al
Alternate History
Art
Auf Deutsch
Autobiography
Children's
Doreen
Doug
Dystopia
Eastern Europe
England
Fabulous Ones
Fantasy
Feminism
Fiction
Games
Germany
Graphic Novel
Graphic Novels
Historical Fiction
History
Horror
Hugo Finalist
Humor
LGBTQIA
Literature
Middle Grade
Mystery
Mythology
Non-fiction
Novella
Poetry
Politics
Religion
Romance
Russia
Science
Science Fiction
Short Stories
Süddeutsche Zeitung
Tantalizing Titles
Thriller
Urban Fantasy
World War II
Young Adult
6 comments
Skip to comment form
Is there cake?
Author
The worst part of is it that no, there wasn’t. There was a pear-chocolate tart, tho, at one point, I’ll grant her that.
Dang.
Mind you, none of my recent books have had much in the way of cake either. Although Ancillary Mercy did feature a reasonable amount of tea.
Author
The book I’m currently reading features a lot of cinnamon toast, so I’ve been making myself treats I haven’t made in years.
Damn it, books, stop making me hungry all the time.
Best to stay away from Gulag memoirs, then. Or indeed most of Soviet history. Food is something of an obsession in many of them. (Of course, in contrast to me, most people have no trouble at all staying away from books about Soviet history.)
Author
I don’t remember having this problem with Solzhenitsyn. I did quite enjoy Anya von Bremzen’s Mastering the Art of Soviet Cooking, which didn’t give me that problem either, tho I think I was obsessed with steak frites at the time due to reading a memoir of life in France just before.