Half a world away from her home in Manitoulin Island, Ethel Mulvany is
starving in Singapore's infamous Changi Prison, along with hundreds of
other women jailed there as POWs during the Second World War. They beat
back pangs of hunger by playing decadent games of make-believe and
writing down recipes filled with cream, raisins, chocolate, butter,
cinnamon, ripe fruit--the unattainable ingredients of peacetime, of
home, of memory.
In this novelistic, immersive biography, Suzanne Evans presents a truly
individual account of WWII through the eyes of Ethel--mercurial,
enterprising, combative, stubborn, and wholly herself. The Taste of
Longing follows Ethel through the fall of Singapore in 1942, the years
of her internment, and beyond. As a prisoner, she devours dog biscuits
and book spines, befriends spiders and smugglers, and endures torture
and solitary confinement. As a free woman back in Canada, she fights to
build a life for herself in the midst of trauma and burgeoning mental
illness.
Woven with vintage recipes and transcribed tape recordings, the story of
Ethel and her fantastical POW Cookbook is a testament to the
often-overlooked strength of women in wartime. It's a story of the
unbreakable power of imagination, generosity, and pure heart.