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The Feast Nearby: How I lost my job, buried…
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The Feast Nearby: How I lost my job, buried a marriage, and found my way by keeping chickens, foraging, preserving, bartering, and eating locally (all on $40 a week) (edition 2011)

by Robin Mather

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
1515180,917 (3.48)6
"A charming ode (with recipes) to eating well and locally, on $40 dollars per week, from a recently unemployed food-journalism veteran. In 2009, Robin Mather found herself unemployed. She consequently moved to rural Michigan, where she committed to eating three home-cooked, seasonal, and local meals a day. In essays that chronicle a year of her ambitious project, Mather explores the confusion surrounding local eating and examines how often we fail to pay attention to the seasons that surround us. With 150 winning recipes such as Lemon-Tarragon Pickled asparagus and Greek-Marinated Grilled Leg of Lamb, Mather draws on her rich kitchen knowledge, honed by years as a food writer. This narrative-cookbook hybrid shares encouraging advice for aspiring locavores, offering both the virtues of kitchen thrift and the pleasures of cooking well"-- "A charming ode (with recipes) to eating well and locally, on $40 per week, from a recently unemployed food-journalism veteran"--Provided by publisher.… (more)
Member:READnotowned
Title:The Feast Nearby: How I lost my job, buried a marriage, and found my way by keeping chickens, foraging, preserving, bartering, and eating locally (all on $40 a week)
Authors:Robin Mather
Info:Ten Speed Press (2011), Hardcover, 272 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:**1/2
Tags:memoir

Work Information

The Feast Nearby: How I lost my job, buried a marriage, and found my way by keeping chickens, foraging, preserving, bartering, and eating locally (all on $40 a week) by Robin Mather

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» See also 6 mentions

Showing 5 of 5
Ugh what a precious tool. ( )
  thewanlorn | Feb 24, 2020 |
I'm about halfway through this book and I'm slightly disappointed because it's not living up to its long subtitle. I'm learning nothing about how the author coped with her job loss or end of her marriage. I am interested in some of the facts she mentions about chickens and milk, but that's about it. As a vegetarian, I find most of the recipes of little interest to me, but I'm used to that. ALso, sometimes her language is a little too flowery for me. ( )
  Stembie3 | Jun 14, 2015 |
The Feast Nearby contains all the things I like in a memoir: a woman in the midst of some major life crises (her husband asked her for a divorce and she lost her job all in the same week), an element of budgeting and simple living by necessity, and recipes! She did lose a bit of credibility when she went on about "retreating to her small Michigan cabin." Really, how bad could it be if you've got a little cabin all squared away for retirement I wondered? But I digress...She imposes a strict limit on her grocery budget of just $40 a week and tries to have as much of it as possible be locally sourced, but not necessarily organic.

Forty dollars a week is a stretch no matter what you do these days, so reading about her method and reasoning seemed fantastic. Having shunned the freezer for a number of years, I have only just come round to the idea that the freezer is your friend and can save you not only time, but a little dosh as well. Of course it will save you nothing without the planning and preparation, so that is what I found most helpful about this book. Ms. Mather goes through the year in seasons and has some simple pleasing recipes to use the foods now as well as preserving them for future use. She shows that it is indeed possible to live the good life while enjoying the bounty of nature on a budget. ( )
  READnotowned | Nov 18, 2014 |
Interesting memoir on living on next to nothing in Michigan. Good looking recipes too. ( )
  bakenquilt | Jan 23, 2014 |
The full title of this book by Robin Mather is "The Feast Nearby: How I lost my job, buried a marriage, and found my way by keeping chickens, foraging, preserving, bartering, and eating locally (all on $40 a week)". This is the truth. I didn't make that up. Being into books about canning, local food, and reinventing your life recently, this book called out to me from the Amazon.com website, and its 5-star reviews must mean that it is actually a great book, right? So I ordered it.

Well, it wasn't what I expected. Not at all. I feel kind of bad writing this review, because I bet Robin Mather is a very nice person in person, but her book fell flat. There are a lot of books out there right now about back-to-the-soil, back-to-the-rural, or just plain back-to-the-kitchen and I wonder if she just thought she could ride the wave. After all, the author had been a food journalist over many years.

I actually believed that the book would be about "How I lost my job, buried a marriage, and found my way by keeping chickens, foraging, preserving, bartering, and eating locally (all on $40 a week)". In smaller print on the cover it also says "essays and recipes". Here is the first revelation - half the book are recipes. Long, winding recipes. If I want a cookbook I buy a cookbook. If I want an autobiography I buy that. I am not sure what to do with this hybrid book. It won't be among the cookbooks, and if it is among the novels, then I will never find the recipes. And there is no list of the recipes in the book. There is an index, but that covers everything, not just the recipes. I am sure some of the recipes are very tasty, but they were used to fill up a thin book into a thicker one.

What I wanted to read about was how she lost her job, how she overcome her sadness over the marriage that was gone, and how she only had $40/week to live on and budget with. But the book lacks depth and details about these things. Nowhere is a budget. Her marriage is just mentioned in the beginning as a side issue, something that forced her to move to a little cottage. It is not really a book about moving to a new place - she already knew a lot of the suppliers and had friends in the area. In fact, it often reads like a marketing piece for her friends that provide local food. (Which is not bad, but not what I want to pay for.)

And the foraging and bartering is minimal, honestly. We are not talking about someone that picks 20 kinds of weeds and make a salad out of it because she has nothing else to eat. For example, how could she buy that expensive coffee and still be under $40/week? There are other things that I wonder about - didn't she get unemployment insurance after she was laid off? That would be more than $160/month I would think... I just wonder, especially since she never clarifies her economic circumstances. At one point she needs to earn money to pay for fuel oil, so she then freelances a few weeks and then gets the money, so why couldn't she do more of that at other times. I just don't feel like we are given the whole picture. This might be because of privacy reasons, but if you hold back on those things, you can't have such a subtitle on a book.

Part of the book is rambling, preaching arguments about the bad food industry, the goodness of local food, the great thing about having chickens, and details about her pets. Barbara Kingsolver has written so much better about the first themes (and Michael Pollan too, even if he is too rambling and fact-and number-crazy as well), that it feels old in this book. We have heard this before.

It would have been so much more interesting to read about the author's own feelings, fears, frustrations, happiness, and experiences, instead of reading another 'eat-local-it-is-good' book. I believe in eating local and fresh food too, but I don't want to be preached and lectured to. Why spend so much time on explaining UHT pasteurization, CAFO animal farms, and coffee roasting facts. I just didn't find her writing interesting. It was well-written, factually accurate, but boring. Why is each chapter focused on mostly one ingredient? Wasn't this to be about her life, not food ingredients? Why is half the book recipes? It honestly feels a but like a copycat of Kingsolver's Animal, Vegetable, Miracle book, but not even half as good. Sorry, I might be harsh, but at least I am honest.

Instead of this book, I suggest you read Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver (about local food), or The Dirty Life by Kristin Kimball (about growing your own food and starting a farm), or American Terroir by Rowan Jacobsen (about food ingredients). All of these three books are fun, fascinating, and great entertainment and education at once.

Now, there is some good things about this book too. The book is exceptionally well designed and printed with nice font choices and paper. But I still can't recommend it for reading. I know I might be in the minority on this, but I think that with the limited time we have in the world, it is best to stick to books that are fun to read. This books get a C+, sorry.

Read more: http://pondpond.blogspot.com/2011/07/book-review-feast-nearby.html#ixzz1TSYRPcSp
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution ( )
4 vote klockrike | Jul 28, 2011 |
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I am working on cultivating my delight in a season's riches without longing for them when they have passed.
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"A charming ode (with recipes) to eating well and locally, on $40 dollars per week, from a recently unemployed food-journalism veteran. In 2009, Robin Mather found herself unemployed. She consequently moved to rural Michigan, where she committed to eating three home-cooked, seasonal, and local meals a day. In essays that chronicle a year of her ambitious project, Mather explores the confusion surrounding local eating and examines how often we fail to pay attention to the seasons that surround us. With 150 winning recipes such as Lemon-Tarragon Pickled asparagus and Greek-Marinated Grilled Leg of Lamb, Mather draws on her rich kitchen knowledge, honed by years as a food writer. This narrative-cookbook hybrid shares encouraging advice for aspiring locavores, offering both the virtues of kitchen thrift and the pleasures of cooking well"-- "A charming ode (with recipes) to eating well and locally, on $40 per week, from a recently unemployed food-journalism veteran"--Provided by publisher.

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