Under the Tuscan sun: at home in Italy

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English
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Buying a villa in the spectacular Italian countryside is a wonderful fantasy -- even if 17 rooms and a garden in need of immediate loving care are included in the asking price. Frances Mayes -- gourmet cook, widely published travel writer, and poet -- changed her life by doing just that. Sprinkled liberally with delicious recipes for inspired Italian dishes, amusing anecdotes about the risks of being your own contractor, and a savvy traveler's reminiscences, Under the Tuscan Sun is Mayes's enchanting account of her love affair with Tuscany: of scouring the neighborhood for the perfect panettone and the perfect plumber; of mornings spent cultivating her garden, and afternoons spent enjoying its fruits in leisurely lunches on the terrace; of jaunts through the hill towns in search of renowned wines; and the renewal not only of a house, but also of the spirit. An unusual memoir that combines the appeal of M. F.K. Fisher, Peter Mayle, and Martha Stewart, Under the Tuscan Sun is a feast for the senses.

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ISBN
9780767900386
9780767917452
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Table of Contents

From the Book - First revised paperback edition.

Preface
Bramare: (archaic) to yearn for
A house and the land it takes two oxen two days to plow
Sister water, brother fire
The wild orchard
Whir of the sun
Festina Tarde (make haste slowly)
A long table under the trees
Summer kitchen notes
Cortona, noble city
Rive, Maremma: into wildest Tuscany
Turning Italian
Green oil
Floating world: a Winter season
Winter kitchen notes
Rose walk
Sempre pietra (always stone)
Relics of Summer
Solleone
Twentieth-Anniversary afterword
Acknowledgements.

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Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These books have the appeal factors strong sense of place, and they have the genres "travel writing -- living abroad" and "travel writing -- europe"; and the subjects "american people in italy," "women travelers," and "travelers."
These books have the genres "travel writing -- living abroad" and "travel writing -- europe"; and the subjects "american people in italy," "houses," and "renovation (architecture)."
Though Star-Crossed Sisters is relationship fiction and Under the Tuscan Sun is travel writing, these engaging reads star American women experiencing Italy's unique charms for the first time. Both offer a strong sense of place and vivid descriptions of Italian life and culture. -- Kaitlin Conner
Middle-aged women share their experiences searching for a life of fulfillment and satisfaction in these reflective memoirs. Under the Tuscan Sun includes an element of armchair travel while I Miss You focuses on the quotidian aspects of the author's life. -- Halle Carlson
These books have the genres "travel writing -- living abroad" and "travel writing -- europe."
These books have the appeal factors evocative and strong sense of place, and they have the genres "travel writing -- living abroad" and "travel writing -- europe"; and the subjects "women travelers" and "voyages and travels."
These books have the genres "travel writing -- living abroad" and "travel writing -- europe"; and the subjects "american people in italy" and "cooking, italian."
We've always had Paris-- and Provence: a scrapbook of our life in France - Wells, Patricia
These lively memoirs of Americans renovating homes in other countries and cultures show just how much one can enjoy almost every minute of it. While Frances Mayes describes her time in Italy, food writer Patrica Wells documents her decades in France. -- Dawn Towery
Pardon my French: how a grumpy American fell in love with France - Johnson, Allen
These books have the appeal factors candid, and they have the genres "travel writing -- living abroad" and "travel writing -- europe"; and the subjects "women travelers" and "voyages and travels."
These books have the genres "travel writing -- living abroad" and "travel writing -- europe"; and the subjects "women travelers," "food writers," and "cooking, french."
These books have the genres "travel writing -- living abroad" and "travel writing -- europe"; and the subject "cooking, italian."
In these uplifting memoirs, women discover new loves and new experiences after moving to Italy. From Scratch is set in Sicily; Under the Tuscan Sun in Tuscany. -- Kaitlin Conner

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Though Yvone Lenard was born in France, she moved to California at a relatively young age. Eventually returning, she fell in love with Provence and bought a house there. Dividing her time between America and France, Lenard, like Frances Mayes, writes of village life, uses lush language to convey feelings as well as fact, and includes tempting recipes. -- Dawn Towery
These compelling authors' lyrical and richly descriptive compotes of food and travel promise to take readers through parts of Europe and America on tours that not only delve into deep regional culinary traditions and mouth-watering flavors, but also vividly evoke the cultures explored and the fascinating personalities encountered. -- Melissa Gray
Like Frances Mayes, Marlena de Blasi is an American fascinated by Italy--its food, people, landscape, history, and culture. De Blasi's romantic life, insights into local personalities and settings, conversational narrative style, and inclusion of recipes (she has a background as a chef) should please Mayes fans. -- Dawn Towery
Readers who like Frances Mayes' memoirs should try fellow American Susan Herrmann Loomis's recipe-laden ones. After attending cooking school in Paris, Loomis eventually settled in a rural part of Normandy, working as a journalist and food writer. Like Mayes, Loomis describes daily life and the amusing mischances that occur to foreigners in a foreign land. -- Dawn Towery
These authors' works have the appeal factors strong sense of place, and they have the genres "travel writing" and "relationship fiction"; and the subjects "women travelers" and "women."
These authors' works have the genre "travel writing"; and the subjects "women travelers," "self-fulfillment," and "writing."
These authors' works have the genre "travel writing"; and the subjects "american people in italy," "houses," and "design and construction."
These authors' works have the genres "travel writing" and "relationship fiction"; and the subjects "women travelers" and "divorced women."
These authors' works have the genre "travel writing"; and the subjects "social life and customs," "women artists," and "female friendship."
These authors' works have the genre "travel writing."
These authors' works have the genres "travel writing" and "food writing"; and the subjects "women travelers" and "self-discovery."
These authors' works have the genre "relationship fiction"; and the subjects "divorced women," "artists," and "biographers."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

It takes a determined effort to read this account of restoring and enjoying a Tuscan farmhouse without experiencing a violent attack of adolescent jealousy. Why her and not me, you'll be screaming as writer and professor Mayes describes languorous lunches on the patio, local wine flowing freely and olive pits casually pitched toward the nearby stone wall. Yes, there were problems--wells running dry, workers vanishing--but the image Mayes creates of her house, the Italian countryside, and her summers there with fellow professor Ed and sundry visitors is nothing short of idyllic: a real-life version of the film Stealing Beauty, but without the funny-looking sculpture scarring the landscape. Mayes' delightful recipes, evocative descriptions of the nearby village of Cortona, and thoughtful musings on the Italian spirit only add to the pleasure. This is armchair travel at its most enticing. Can we really blame ourselves for wanting to strap Mayes down in some ratty armchair while we go live in her farmhouse? (Reviewed Sept. 15, 1996)0811808424Bill Ott

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Mayes's favorite guide to Northern Italy allots seven pages to the town of Cortona, where she owns a house. But here she finds considerably more to say about it than that, all of it so enchanting that an armchair traveler will find it hard to resist jumping out of the chair and following in her footsteps. The recently divorced author is euphoric about the old house in the Tuscan hills that she and her new lover renovated and now live in during summer vacations and on holidays. A poet, food-and-travel writer, Italophile and chair of the creative writing department at San Francisco State University, Mayes is a fine wordsmith and an exemplary companion whose delight in a brick floor she has just waxed is as contagious as her pleasure in the landscape, architecture and life of the village. Not the least of the charms of her book are the recipes for delicious meals she has made. Above all, her observations about being at home in two very different cultures are sharp and wise. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Library Journal Review

In a carefully written story, poet Mayes (Ex Voto, Lost Roads, 1995), who chairs the creative writing department at San Francisco State University, recounts the purchase and renovation of an abandoned Tuscan villa. She begins with the 1990 search with her companion, Ed, for a summer home to take the place of the rented farmhouses of past years. They finally decide on Bramasole ("Yearning for the Sun"), a villa with 17 rooms and a garden that has been standing empty for 30 years. There is the ordeal of getting money transferred via the tangled Italian banking system, as well as bringing together the owner, builders, and government officials to get the necessary work done. The daunting process requires several years. Meanwhile, Mayes finds Italian country life a healthy antidote to hectic San Francisco, enjoying, for example, the fruits of her own garden, friends in the village, and the first olive harvest. This is an unusual memoir of one woman's challenge to herself and its successful transformation into a satisfying opportunity to improve the quality of her life.‘William R. Smith, Johns Hopkins Univ. Lib., Baltimore (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Library Journal Reviews

In a carefully written story, poet Mayes (Ex Voto, Lost Roads, 1995), who chairs the creative writing department at San Francisco State University, recounts the purchase and renovation of an abandoned Tuscan villa. She begins with the 1990 search with her companion, Ed, for a summer home to take the place of the rented farmhouses of past years. They finally decide on Bramasole ("Yearning for the Sun"), a villa with 17 rooms and a garden that has been standing empty for 30 years. There is the ordeal of getting money transferred via the tangled Italian banking system, as well as bringing together the owner, builders, and government officials to get the necessary work done. The daunting process requires several years. Meanwhile, Mayes finds Italian country life a healthy antidote to hectic San Francisco, enjoying, for example, the fruits of her own garden, friends in the village, and the first olive harvest. This is an unusual memoir of one woman's challenge to herself and its successful transformation into a satisfying opportunity to improve the quality of her life. William R. Smith, Johns Hopkins Univ. Lib., Baltimore Copyright 1998 Library Journal Reviews

Copyright 1998 Library Journal Reviews
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Mayes's favorite guide to Northern Italy allots seven pages to the town of Cortona, where she owns a house. But here she finds considerably more to say about it than that, all of it so enchanting that an armchair traveler will find it hard to resist jumping out of the chair and following in her footsteps. The recently divorced author is euphoric about the old house in the Tuscan hills that she and her new lover renovated and now live in during summer vacations and on holidays. A poet, food-and-travel writer, Italophile and chair of the creative writing department at San Francisco State University, Mayes is a fine wordsmith and an exemplary companion whose delight in a brick floor she has just waxed is as contagious as her pleasure in the landscape, architecture and life of the village. Not the least of the charms of her book are the recipes for delicious meals she has made. Above all, her observations about being at home in two very different cultures are sharp and wise. (Oct.) # Copyright 1996 Cahners Business Information.

Copyright 1996 Cahners Business Information.
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