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list price: $9.99
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
category: Biography & Autobiography
published: Aug 2023
ISBN:9781773860466
publisher: Caitlin Press

Food Was Her Country

The Memoir of a Queer Daughter

by Marusya Bociurkiw

tagged: lgbt, prejudice
Description

How can a god-fearing Catholic, immigrant mother and her godless, bohemian daughter possibly find common ground? Food Was Her Country is the story of a mother, her queer daughter and their tempestuous culinary relationship. From accounts of 1970s' macrobiotic potlucks to a dangerous mother-daughter road trip in search of lunch, this book is funny, dark and tender in turn.

Bociurkiw's Ukraine-born mother is a devotee of the Food Channel and a consummate cook. When she gets cancer of the larynx, she must learn how to eat and speak all over again. Her daughter learns how to feed her mother, but, more crucially, how to let her mother feed her. Food Was Her Country explores a daughter's journey of grieving and reconciliation, uncovering the truth of her relationship with her mother only after her death.

Marusya Bociurkiw's Comfort Food for Breakups: The Memoir of a Hungry Girl was a food writing phenomenon: the world's first LGBTQ food memoir. With this long-awaited follow-up, Food Was Her Country draws upon a queer archive of art and activism, stories from her popular food blog, Recipes for Trouble, as well as social histories of food, evoking new beginnings and fresh ways of tasting the world.

About the Author

Marusya Bociurkiw is a filmmaker and the author of three previous books, including the novel The Children of Mary (2006) and the story collection The Woman Who Loved Airports (1994). Born in Edmonton, she has also lived in Montreal, Halifax, Vancouver, and currently Toronto, where she teaches film and media studies.

Awards
  • Runner-up, Lambda Literary Award, Memoir/Biography
Editorial Reviews

Food Was Her Country is a tenderly crafted story about complex relationships and histories. In it, lives come together across the dinner table, where meals—and more—are shared.”

—Mya Alexice, Foreword Reviews


“An absorbing reminiscence that’s sad and consistently regretful — and yet a delight to read — Bociurkiw’s companion volume to Comfort Food for Breakups, her 2007 memoir, meditates on and interweaves family, migration, rejection, history, and loss.”

—Brett Grubisic, The Toronto Star

— The Toronto Star
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