The Kitchen Man
Ira Wood
The Kitchen Man
Ira Wood
In this delightful, laugh-out-loud first novel, Gabe Rose, the brash Jewish waiter with a play in his pocket, is looking for his big chance. Where else to find it but at the gilded, overpriced tables of Boston’s fanciest restaurant, where crooked politicians, tight Old Money, preppies, parvenus and, of course, the stars come to dine on yesterday’s fish under tonight’s hollandaise? Under-30 Gabe contrives to meet over-40 Cynthia Kagan, a tough, sexy playwright-director, big in feminist circles…Plot and character are pas de deux under Wood’s fast-stepping, always engaging choreography, but how to explain all the sharp and colorful, emotionally honest, sometimes heart-grabbing ensemble work? Besides the fun, The Kitchen Man is about love and loyalty outside conventional categories of age, gender and body proportions, a gamey kind of You Can’t Take It With You with extremely recognizable people.-Kirkus Reviews (starred review)An excerpt from The Kitchen Man
Everyone else I know accepts temporary malaise, the blues, as an ordinary human infirmity like the flu and sees nothing wrong with a few lackluster days of self-pampering and doughy lying about. But my own chosen love, my Cynthia, the caramel center of my bittersweet life, views depression as indistinguishable from masturbation and weight lifting: a waste of limited male energy.
I admit it. The tides of my disposition fluctuate with my luck at the mail box. Following this morning’s letter of rejection I returned to the house with the glazed, magnetized eyes of the children of the damned.
Uh oh, was all Cynthia said.
Maybe it’s a sign. Maybe I should give up playwriting. Finally admit it. No, I do not have any talent. It’s time I grew up, accepted the fact that some people have it and some people never will.
She waited for me to finish. It is no secret that in her women’s group I am known as Uncle Vanya.
Maybe I should just give up and find something I’m good at.
How about pottery? Or the guitar, she said. Definitely. The guitar. And give yourself a solid month. Then if the Rolling Stones don’t ask you to join them, take up, let’s see, sand painting. According to Cynthia you don’t pout about rejections
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