This collection of interviews captures the conversation of one of the
most prominent prose writers in the Unites States. About her the
Chicago Sun-Times says, "She is to literary prose what Sir Laurence
Olivier is to acting or Willie Mays is to baseball."
These interviews reveal her uncompromising and frequently contradictory
attitudes toward the luxuries and necessities of gastronomy, the idea
that sensual appreciation, in all aspects of life, is or should be
necessary. In her conversations m. F. K. Fisher often returns to the
complexities of her life. Other recurring subjects in these interviews
include the nature of aging, the differences between men and women, and
her own relationship to her work, which she describes with precision and
a selective memory.
These pieces give us a view of M. F. K. Fisher in motion--speaking and
changing her mind at will, with fierce wit, unable to tolerate
simplistic strategies of thinking and living.