Take a photo of a barcode or cover
A review by starryeyedenigma
An Embarrassment of Mangoes: A Caribbean Interlude by Ann Vanderhoof
4.0
My Rating: 4 awesome stars!!
Book Name: An Embarrassment of Mangoes (A Caribbean Interlude)
Author: Ann Vanderhoof
Genre: Non Fiction/Travelogue/Culture&History/Caribbean food recipe guide
Before I start my review, here is some trivia. Did you know (because I didn't, before I read this book):
Receta means recipe in Spanish?
Conch is a popular seafood in the Bahamas?
Luperon is called a 'Hurricane Hole'?
Gugua - are not a strange species of insect but actually what the public minivans are called? Lol
Lambi is not lamb, but the Creole word for Conch?
Fig, is not Fig, but actually a Banana in the Caribbean - who knew!!
And many many more such little facts- if you've found this interesting, I would say, you don't even have to read the rest of the review, just read the book!! hahah
Ok, so as part of the 2017 book club reading challenge, we have a travel/tourist challenge where the moderator will select a place/region for each month as the topic, and we have to select a book that is either set in that place/location or whose author is from that location and read and review it for that month. So, for January, the location was Caribbean islands and after a lot of skimming over the internet on various options, I chose to read this book, just because the description and the author seemed very real to me and what better way to travel (if not really traveling) than by reading a good travelogue?! ;)
I don't read a lot of non fiction to be frank, so I wasn't sure how to rate this book. But I figured I did find the book interesting and amusing and I also did learn a whole lot of things, so this definitely qualifies for a 4 and above rating!
The book is written by Ann Vanderhoof, about how she and her partner, Steve, decided and planned to take a 2 year break from their daily 9-9 jobs in Canada and go sailing in their own sailing boat across the Caribbean islands. It talks about her fears, her anxiety in the beginning since she has never sailed that long before in open ocean, her amazement and pure joys of trying out all the local fruits, vegetables and seafood that they catch fresh out of the water, her loving interactions with the locals, her huge list of recipes (that I really want to try but can't because I don't have most of those ingredients or cooking tools available with me yet), her test of strength and grit during the storm nights manning the sailboat, her joys of finding delight in the nature and in minimalism and her disappointment when the journey is over.
I've never sailed, nor have I visited any of the Caribbean islands, but reading this book, I felt like I was on a virtual tour there and now I've added a visit to the Caribbean - at least to one of the islands to my list of travel destinations now..lol! :D
So, I'd recommend this book if you like reading travelogues that are real, filled with real stories, humor and lots of facts on sailing, fishing, history, culture, and my favorite touch to the book - the recipes at the end of each chapter :)
Book Name: An Embarrassment of Mangoes (A Caribbean Interlude)
Author: Ann Vanderhoof
Genre: Non Fiction/Travelogue/Culture&History/Caribbean food recipe guide
Before I start my review, here is some trivia. Did you know (because I didn't, before I read this book):
Receta means recipe in Spanish?
Conch is a popular seafood in the Bahamas?
Luperon is called a 'Hurricane Hole'?
Gugua - are not a strange species of insect but actually what the public minivans are called? Lol
Lambi is not lamb, but the Creole word for Conch?
Fig, is not Fig, but actually a Banana in the Caribbean - who knew!!
And many many more such little facts- if you've found this interesting, I would say, you don't even have to read the rest of the review, just read the book!! hahah
Ok, so as part of the 2017 book club reading challenge, we have a travel/tourist challenge where the moderator will select a place/region for each month as the topic, and we have to select a book that is either set in that place/location or whose author is from that location and read and review it for that month. So, for January, the location was Caribbean islands and after a lot of skimming over the internet on various options, I chose to read this book, just because the description and the author seemed very real to me and what better way to travel (if not really traveling) than by reading a good travelogue?! ;)
I don't read a lot of non fiction to be frank, so I wasn't sure how to rate this book. But I figured I did find the book interesting and amusing and I also did learn a whole lot of things, so this definitely qualifies for a 4 and above rating!
The book is written by Ann Vanderhoof, about how she and her partner, Steve, decided and planned to take a 2 year break from their daily 9-9 jobs in Canada and go sailing in their own sailing boat across the Caribbean islands. It talks about her fears, her anxiety in the beginning since she has never sailed that long before in open ocean, her amazement and pure joys of trying out all the local fruits, vegetables and seafood that they catch fresh out of the water, her loving interactions with the locals, her huge list of recipes (that I really want to try but can't because I don't have most of those ingredients or cooking tools available with me yet), her test of strength and grit during the storm nights manning the sailboat, her joys of finding delight in the nature and in minimalism and her disappointment when the journey is over.
I've never sailed, nor have I visited any of the Caribbean islands, but reading this book, I felt like I was on a virtual tour there and now I've added a visit to the Caribbean - at least to one of the islands to my list of travel destinations now..lol! :D
So, I'd recommend this book if you like reading travelogues that are real, filled with real stories, humor and lots of facts on sailing, fishing, history, culture, and my favorite touch to the book - the recipes at the end of each chapter :)