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The Particular Sadness of Lemon CakeA Novel

Aimee Bender

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Summary

The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake

By: Aimee Bender

Narrarated by: Aimee Bender

The wondrous Aimee Bender conjures the lush and moving story of a girl whose magical gift is really a devastating curse.

On the eve of her ninth birthday, unassuming Rose Edelstein, a girl at the periphery of schoolyard games and her distracted parents’ attention, bites into her mother’s homemade lemon-chocolate cake and discovers she has a magical gift: she can taste her mother’s emotions in the cake. She discovers this gift to her horror, for her mother—her cheerful, good-with-crafts, can-do mother—tastes of despair and desperation. Suddenly, and for the rest of her life, food becomes a peril and a threat to Rose.

The curse her gift has bestowed is the secret knowledge all families keep hidden—her mother’s life outside the home, her father’s detachment, her brother’s clash with the world. Yet as Rose grows up she learns to harness her gift and becomes aware that there are secrets even her taste buds cannot discern.

The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake is a luminous tale about the enormous difficulty of loving someone fully when you know too much about them. It is heartbreaking and funny, wise and sad, and confirms Aimee Bender’s place as “a writer who makes you grateful for the very existence of language” (San Francisco Chronicle).

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Total File Size: 244 MB (7 files) Total Length: 8 Hours, 54 Minutes

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Alice Gregory

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Alice Gregory is a Brooklyn-based freelancer. She's written for a variety of publications including New York, NPR, Details, and The New York Observer.

06.01.10
Aimee Bender, The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake
2010 | Label: Random House Audio

A novel that tastes like genius
The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake, the second novel from Aimee Bender, is saturated with the author’s unique brand of plausible magical realism. Fantasy is undercut with domestic detail, and thought experiments assume plausibility.

The setting is suburban Los Angeles, where sun and salt and bougainvillea bleach out inevitable grimness. The novel opens with Rose, our protagonist, as a little girl. She sneaks a morsel of the lemon cake her mother has baked for her birthday. Rather than tasting the sugar, butter, flour, eggs, and citrus, she discerns her mother’s profound loneliness, which assumes a flavor and mouthfeel Rose can only describe as a “hollowness.”

This is the first bite in what becomes a life of exquisite and unbearable empathy, a life of synesthesic eating. Flavors assume the emotions and conditions of their preparation and history. Rose can taste the bleakness of factory workers’ lives, the violence of animal slaughter, the lovingness of produce harvest. Growing up in a family in which sadness is swallowed and masked with a smile, in which pain is never acknowledged, Rose’s perception is both a blessing a curse. Food is a burden, but she’s able to perceive those feelings that nobody will ever admit.

Don’t mistake the novel’s friendliness and readability for smallness though. The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake — a neuronovel through and through — makes inquires into the limits of language while exposing the vast chasms of the things we let go unsaid. Aimee Bender reads this audiobook, and her voice is as warm and mellifluous as lemon cake itself, fresh out of the oven.

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