Oglala Lakota chef Sean Sherman has selected Francis Lam at Clarkson Potter to publish Turtle Island: The Foods and Traditions of the Indigenous Peoples of North America, a look at the foodways of the numerous tribes and First Nations of what is now the United States, Mexico, and Canada. The book will feature cooks, farmers, seed savers, and artisans who have kept these traditions alive and are powering a revival of pre-colonial Indigenous food culture. Including some 200 ancestral and modern recipes, Turtle Island represents a collaboration between Sherman, Native food sovereignty scholar Elizabeth Hoover, and food writer Kristin Donnelly. In a separate auction, Penguin Canada acquired the rights to publish the book’s Canadian edition.
Edward McClelland's Abraham Lincoln book sold to Pegasus
Journalist and historian Edward McClelland has reached an agreement with Pegasus to write Chorus of the Union: How Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas Set Aside Their Rivalry to Save the Nation. The book will explore Lincoln’s long contest and eventual alliance with Stephen Douglas, highlighting the role that graceful concession serves in the electoral process, and also challenging the “great man” theory that attends Lincoln’s legend, investigating his complicated views on race and slavery, as well as the outsized role that his Illinois origins played in his rise, the state being (then as now) a microcosm of the nation, and the crucible of the slavery debate.
The Chef's Garden is an “indispensable kitchen resource”
Farmer Lee Jones’ stunning, comprehensive guide to the modern world of common and unusual vegetables—written with fellow Straus Literary author Kristin Donnelly—is available now from Avery, highlighting wisdom and recipes from Jones’ renowned family-run specialty vegetable farm in Ohio.
This week, The New York Times published a glowing review of The Chef’s Garden, in which Florence Fabricant recommends making the book’s recipe for “luscious carrot pot roast”—that is, “if you make only one of them.” The book was also cited in how-to cooking guides by The New York Times’ Melissa Clark and Bon Appétit’s Basically, demonstrating the book’s power to be an “indispensable kitchen resource,” as Cleveland.com calls it.
The Chef’s Garden, with a foreword from José Andrés, is now available in bookstores everywhere.
The Lowering Days published to national acclaim
Since its March 2 publication by Harper, Gregory Brown’s novel set in Maine’s lush Penobscot River valley in the 1980s has received praise from the national press. The Boston Globe called it a “graceful and compassionate debut novel,” while the New York Times commended its “deep understanding of the history of anti-Native oppression in the region.” As the Bangor Daily News put it, The Lowering Days “tells a sweeping story with which many Mainers may be familiar — about family dynamics, about what happens to a town once its main employer closes, about environmental degradation and about the complicated relationship between Indigenous people and white settlers.” And, per Minneapolis’ Star Tribune: “Brown writes a fluid, lyrical prose that escorts us deep into the emotional lives of his characters.”
The Lowering Days is available now in the US, with the HarperCollins UK edition set to follow in April and a French edition from Gallmeister scheduled for fall 2022.
Jonah Straus to appear at Muse & the Marketplace writing conference
This year’s Muse & the Marketplace Virtual Enhanced Writing Residency is scheduled to take place online from April 21–25, 2021. During the conference, Jonah Straus will provide feedback to writers through the Manuscript Mart and host a small-group agent info session. Though both of these are now sold out, he will also host a session titled “A Nice Problem to Have: A Guide to Publishers and How to Compare Them” from 2 to 3:15 pm on Saturday, April 24, available to all attendees. Conference registration is open now.
Midnight in Vehicle City earns praise upon publication
The Chicago Review of Books recently gave an excellent review to Edward McClelland’s account of the 1936-1937 General Motors workers’ strike in Flint, Michigan, calling the book a “blueprint for better working conditions, and for a revival of the middle class.” The Christian Science Monitor also featured the book on its list of the ten best books of February 2021, praising its “vivid” recounting of “one of the biggest labor victories in U.S. history.”
Midnight in Vehicle City: General Motors, Flint, and the Strike that Created the Middle Class is
now available from Beacon Press for purchase online
and in bookstores everywhere.
Emily Meggett's Gullah Cookbook Sold at Auction to Abrams
Emily Meggett has chosen Abrams to publish her cookbook on the history, food, and culture of the Gullah Geechee people of coastal South Carolina and Georgia. Meggett, a Gullah elder and culinary matriarch of South Carolina’s Edisto Island, has helped preserve the traditions, language, and foodways of her community’s West African ancestors. Her cookbook will feature some 150 recipes representing the heart of Low Country cuisine, including stuffed shad with parsley rice, deviled crab, okra soup, broiled quail, hoppin' john, and sour cream cake.
French edition of Cocktail Codex released today
Paris publisher Éditions First has launched the French edition of Death and Co’s Cocktail Codex. Originally published by Ten Speed Press, this comprehensive primer on the craft of mixing drinks won the James Beard Foundation’s Best Book of the Year in 2019 — the first drinks book ever to do so — and claimed the title of Best New Cocktail Book at Tales of the Cocktail. Foreign translation rights have also been sold to publishers in Italy, Russia, and China.
Maneet Chauhan's Chaat published today
Today marks the release of Chaat, Maneet Chauhan’s exploration of one of India’s most iconic and delicious styles of cooking. In this breathtakingly illustrated cookbook, Chauhan weaves in personal stories and remembrances as well as historical and cultural notes from a cross-country culinary journey by train, in which she and co-writer Jody Eddy sought out various types of chaat from local markets and street vendors, as well as in the homes of family and friends.
Having already earned press accolades in the New York Times, Bon Appétit, Food & Wine, People, Parade, Travel & Leisure, and the Washington Post, Chaat is now available for purchase online.
Spanish rights sold for John Keene's Counternarratives
Barcelona publisher Pálido Fuego has licensed the right to publish John Keene’s acclaimed Counternarratives in Spanish. Originally published by New Directions, this masterful collection of thirteen stories and novellas spanning five centuries has already been sold into French, Turkish, Greek, and Swedish, with excerpts also translated into German and Japanese.
