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Milk fed a novel
Milk fed a novel






So, Rachel sent her mother a text saying. “It was a phrase you’d associate with a person who didn’t need anything from anyone a closed system, an automaton. Rachel‘s therapist said she should expect nothing. Rachel wasn’t expecting fanfare from her mother, but she thought she would at least be a little bit proud. When she texted her mother, she wrote, “how did they find you?” Rachel had just been chosen by a low-trafficked entertainment blog as one of 25 young female comics to watch. ’s raining here today in California-so I may skip my morning walk to sit on our spinnaker stationary bike.Īnd I ‘might’ say ‘ooo’ when I sit on the bike today. I’m sure readers will find fault - roll their eyes- say ‘ooo’ to themselves in parts. ( our daughter has been recovered for many years).īut I loved ‘Milk Fed’.

milk fed a novel

So I tend to stay away from the topic today. (our daughter was hospitalized five times battling anorexic). Given that Rachel, our protagonist had an eating disorder, I shouldn’t have liked this book at all. The dialogue was fresh, in your face bold, smart & savvy. I read it in one sitting - not stopping to pee or make tea. Milk Fed is a tender and riotously funny meditation on love, certitude, and the question of what we are all being fed, from one of our major writers on the psyche-both sacred and profane. Pairing superlative emotional insight with unabashed vivid fantasy, Broder tells a tale of appetites: physical hunger, sexual desire, spiritual longing, and the ways that we as humans can compartmentalize these so often interdependent instincts. Rachel is suddenly and powerfully entranced by Miriam-by her sundaes and her body, her faith and her family-and as the two grow closer, Rachel embarks on a journey marked by mirrors, mysticism, mothers, milk, and honey. Rachel is content to carry on subsisting-until her therapist encourages her to take a ninety-day communication detox from her mother, who raised her in the tradition of calorie counting.Įarly in the detox, Rachel meets Miriam, a zaftig young Orthodox Jewish woman who works at her favorite frozen yogurt shop and is intent upon feeding her. At night, she pedals nowhere on the elliptical machine.

milk fed a novel

By day, she maintains an illusion of existential control, by way of obsessive food rituals, while working as an underling at a Los Angeles talent management agency. Rachel is twenty-four, a lapsed Jew who has made calorie restriction her religion. A scathingly funny, wildly erotic, and fiercely imaginative story about food, sex, and god from the acclaimed author of The Pisces and So Sad Today.








Milk fed a novel