The Family Frying Pan
by Bryce Courtenay
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Description
Mrs Moses is a small woman with a big heart and enormous courage. The only survivor of a Cossack raid on her village, she takes with her a big cast-iron frying pan, so heavy that she can only sling it over her back. Yet this is no ordinary frying pan - it's The Family Frying Pan, blessed with a Russian soul. From this frying pan Mrs Moses manages to feed the various refugees who are travelling with her across Russia to freedom. In return, each of the group must tell a story around the show more campfire at night - stories of compassion and bravery, of human frailty and, above all, of hope. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
I’m usually wary of any book where the author’s name is in larger print than the title of the book. This one though, was recommended to me days before I was heading to a village for five weeks isolation in Papua New Guinea. In desperation, I took it along. It wasn’t until 2 days before we left and I’d finished all I wanted to read that I asked my wife to choose my next book. Fate laid it in my lap.
It’s loosely true… loosely. Although how much such an ultimately influential group of people all happen to have escaped Russia early 20th century barbarism all in one group is a little contrived I fear.
However, if we lay scepticism aside, it’s a cosy piece of story-telling consisting as it does of 7 stories and then short show more accounts as to what’s happened to each of the story-tellers. The stories all take place around a fire where a meal is cooked over a frying pan. In essence, the book has nothing to do with the frying pan really. My edition had a picture of a violin on the front and that had nothing much to do with the stories either.
It’s a fast read – one of those books where it seems the publisher has discovered they have a surplus budget for paper. It would make a good read on a plane if it was a short flight. For long haul, it’d be over before lunch. show less
It’s loosely true… loosely. Although how much such an ultimately influential group of people all happen to have escaped Russia early 20th century barbarism all in one group is a little contrived I fear.
However, if we lay scepticism aside, it’s a cosy piece of story-telling consisting as it does of 7 stories and then short show more accounts as to what’s happened to each of the story-tellers. The stories all take place around a fire where a meal is cooked over a frying pan. In essence, the book has nothing to do with the frying pan really. My edition had a picture of a violin on the front and that had nothing much to do with the stories either.
It’s a fast read – one of those books where it seems the publisher has discovered they have a surplus budget for paper. It would make a good read on a plane if it was a short flight. For long haul, it’d be over before lunch. show less
This was a fantastic book. Recommended by my reading buddy Kyla, this was a wonderful collection of stories all woven into an overall tale of adventure and history. I kept wondering what was real, what was not, did this really happen, or did it not? I was surprised how captivated I became by each character I met.
Strangely engaging, though not my first choice. Beach reading.
My favorite book from Bryce Courtenay always recommend this book
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Author Information

46+ Works 14,370 Members
Bryce Courtenay was born in Johannesburg, South Africa on August 14, 1933. He studied journalism in London and then settled in Australia in 1958. Instead of becoming a journalist, he went into advertising and became a successful creative director. He won most of the local and international advertising awards and a gold medal for Best Documentary show more at the 1984 New York Film Festival. He started writing after he turned 50. His first novel, The Power of One, was adapted into a 1992 film starring Morgan Freeman and Stephen Dorff. His other novels include Jessica, The Potato Factory, Tommo and Hawk, Solomon's Song, Tandia, and Jack of Diamonds. In 1993, he wrote the non-fiction book April Fool's Day, which is a personal account of the death of his son Damon after he contracted AIDs from a routine blood transfusion. Courtenay died of stomach cancer on November 22, 2012 at the age of 79. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Awards and Honors
Common Knowledge
- First words
- When I married into my wife’s family, I inherited her grandmother, Mrs Moses.
- Quotations
- You soon learn when you are travelling in a group to observe well but to remark little on the doings and affairs of others
Siberia, if you say it slowly, is a malicious word, like a blunt knife being pushed slowly into the stomach… a howling gale in the Russian imagination. - Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"I’m afraid it has nothing whatsoever to do with me, my fish is cooked in a frying pan possessed of a Russian soul."
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- Reviews
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- (3.72)
- Languages
- English
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- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 19
- ASINs
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