Another Insane Devotion: On the
Love of Cats and Persons. By Peter Trachtenberg. Da Capo. $24.
Best Food Writing 2012.
Edited by Holly Hughes. Da Capo. $16.
Dog Company: The Boys of Pointe
du Hoc—The Rangers Who Accomplished D-Day’s Toughest Mission and Led the Way across
Europe. By Patrick K. O’Donnell. Da Capo. $26.
One of the best things
about giving books as gifts is how closely they can be tailored to a
recipient’s personal tastes. There really is something out there for everybody,
and the sensitive gift-giver will figure out what will especially delight a
particular recipient, then match person with present, and end up offering
something that will continue to be meaningful and enjoyable well after the
holiday season. Peter Trachtenberg’s
memoir of dual love affairs, with his wife and with his cat, will certainly not
be to all tastes, but its sensitive writing, its focus on love and loss and the
way the two sometimes merge, will intrigue people trying to come to terms with
their own relationships (human and animal) and interested in a journey that
proves as enlightening as it is entertaining. This is not to say that it is all entertaining, by any means. The book
is a journey on multiple levels, the surface one being that Trachtenberg’s cat,
Biscuit, goes missing, and Trachtenberg seeks her over a distance of,
eventually, 700 miles. But the journey is more than physical, as the search
leads Trachtenberg into his own past, into contemplation of the many mysteries
of cats, into a search for the meaning of love as it applies not only to
human-animal relationships but also to human-human ones. What gives
Trachtenberg’s search a large part of its impetus is that Biscuit disappears
just as Trachtenberg finds his marriage disintegrating, a state of affairs that
the author recalls with considerable intensity, “but, as Freud showed us, there
is such a thing as an excess of vividness.”
Trachtenberg intersperses scenes from his marriage, his love life, and
his cat search with sudden dips into history: “An early description of the
domestic cat is this one by one Bartholomew de Glanville, written in 1240: ‘A
beast of uncertain hair and color. …And he is a full lecherous in youth, swift,
pliant, and merry…’” Like most memoirs,
Trachtenberg’s is ultimately about his search for himself, not just for Biscuit
or for love or for what has happened between him and his wife, whom he designates
simply as “F.” Along the way,
Trachtenberg meditates on the effects of Skype, on Schrödinger’s cat, on the Catskill Mountains’ origin in the Devonian
era of 350 million years ago. The book
does not build to a grand conclusion, but ends as it has progressed, as a slice
of life. Another Insane Devotion is for readers who want to immerse
themselves in life, love and felines.
Food fanciers will
find much that is delectable in Best Food
Writing 2012, a book whose eight sections encompass just about every angle
from which food can be viewed and skewed with the exception of an actual
cookbook. Holly Hughes arranges the book into “Food Fights,” “Farm to Table,”
“Home Cooking,” “Foodways,” “Dude Food,” “The Family Table,” “Someone’s in the
Kitchen,” and “Personal Tastes,” although that final title could really stand
for every article here: all the discussions are matters of personal taste. The writing comes not only from expected
sources such as Food & Wine, Bon
Appetit and Edible Manhattan, but
also from Garden & Gun, Memoir
Journal and Texas Monthly, among
other sources. There are 50 essays in
all, on subjects so wide-ranging that the section titles only hint at them.
From “Pastoral Romance” by Brett Cunningham, for example: “We have no history
of a food system that does not depend on oppression of some sort, and it seems
unlikely that we will be able to create a future system that avoids this fate.
…[I]f a central goal of the movement is a more equitable food system, then the
notion that we once had it right is deeply problematic.” From “The Pastrami Dilemma” by John Birdsall:
“The owners of these three pastrami factories, kind of like dons in a benign
pastrami mafia, each control their own turf.”
From “Truffle in Paradise” by John Gutekanst: “As our last night in
Italy winds down and Bruno’s pathetic karaoke version of ‘Baby, We Can Talk All
Night’ wafts across the disco, I think about our unique tartufo adventure. Was there really danger or impending doom at the
hands of the truffle mafia?” This is
food writing that goes beyond food itself, that sometimes deals with the intricacies
of food preparation and consumption but even more often discusses what food means, what it stands for, where it fits
into life rather than where it fits into our mouths and bellies. It is for readers who find the contemplation
of food in a larger context particularly delicious.
And for readers who
remain enthralled by the military history of World War II, there continue to be
some fine and finely detailed books available, such as Patrick K. O’Donnell’s Dog Company. This is about D Company of
the 2nd Ranger Battalion, which joined other Ranger units in
climbing the 90-foot-high sheer cliffs of Pointe du Hoc on D-Day to disable and
destroy the German guns pointing down on the beach from above. The 68-man
company lost half its members in the assault, and the survivors had no rest,
helping lead the charge inland to Germany, through the Battle of the Bulge and
beyond. Books like Dog Company are, inevitably, 100% devoted to celebrations of
heroism, to uncomplicated people doing great deeds in an incontrovertibly just
war. Portraits of the men are fleshed
out enough to make their reality apparent, but not enough to detract from the
hagiographic approach. O’Donnell humanizes the members of Dog Company by
discussing the five-foot-three sniper who was a professional tap dancer, the
company prankster and his practical jokes, the soldier who broke both legs in a
parachute training exercise and thereafter walked like a duck, the sergeant who
scaled the cliffs despite being hit in the side by a machine-gun bullet, and
others. He talks not only about the
well-known D-Day battle but also about other, nearly forgotten ones, such as
the fight for Hill 400 in Germany’s Hürtgen
Forest: “Rain and fog, dense trees, deep ravines, and the ever-present shelling
transformed the Hürtgen into a
dark green hell.” And O’Donnell even ties Dog Company’s heroics to more-recent
times: President Reagan thanked the Rangers in a speech at Pointe du Hoc on
June 6, 1984, the 40th anniversary of D-Day. There is plenty of
action here, plenty of detail about battles major and minor, plenty of heroism
to contemplate, and plenty of material to keep readers fascinated by the events
of World War II interested well beyond the holiday season.
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