
A Half Baked Idea
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Narrated by:
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Olivia Potts
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By:
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Olivia Potts
About this listen
Broought to you by Penguin.
At the moment her mother died, Olivia Potts was baking a cake. She was trying to impress the man who would later become her husband. Meanwhile, 275 miles away, her mother was dying.
In the grief-stricken months that followed, Olivia came home from her job as a criminal barrister miserable and tired, and baked soda bread, pizza, and chocolate banana cake.
Even when it went badly (which was often), cooking brought her comfort. So she concocted a plan: she would begin a newer, happier life, filled with fewer magistrates and more macarons.
She left the bar for Le Cordon Bleu, plunging headfirst into the eccentric world of patisserie. Interspersed with recipes ranging from passionfruit pavlova to her mother's shepherd's pie, this is a heartbreaking, hilarious, life-affirming memoir about dealing with grief, falling in love and learning how to bake a really, really good cake.
©2019 Olivia Potts (P)2019 Penguin AudioA journey through grief, courtrooms,and culinary
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Moving, funny and rather mouth-watering all rolled into one book.
Moving, funny and delicious
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Empowering
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What Can I Say. It's Wonderful!
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I Adored This Book
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Fabulous. Thoroughly enjoyed it.
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One thing that struck me as awful was the author saying something in the lines of that it is worse to lose a loved one quickly without warning, than for the loved one to die of illness and the family having time to say goodbye. I disagree strongly. That is a selfish point of view of a healthy person who would prefer to make her loved ones suffer prolonged pain and fear to than put herself through the discomfort of the shocking news of the loss. You're the one who gets to live. You merely have to make the effort to adjust your mindset to accepting the loss. Painful, yes, but not as painful as cancer! Be grateful your loved one didn't have time to suffer or be scared. And that you get to be someone who has not witnessed a loved one in extreme pain. I have lost my mum and several relatives to cancer. I assure you I would give my own life happily if I could have spared my mum and the others the months of torture they endured while slowly dying from this horrible disease. There's nothing worse than being helpless beside your loved one's bedside watching them be eaten away by the cancer, slowly withering and in agony and afraid. I felt the author came across quite self-centered and uncaring of the feelings of others in her story! Whiny and woe is me. Rather than be a comforting story about baking it was a story of a self obsessed person who thinks the world should revolve aroung her needs, ignores everyone else's needs and feelings and who is incessantly complaining about her mother's death and more. It made me quite upset.
I thought this book was about baking
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Disappointed
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