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Cookbooks Food Wine

By Self Publishing Titans
Crying in H Mart: A Memoir

Crying in H Mart: A Memoir

by Michelle Zauner

4.4 (24604 ratings)
Cookbooks Food Wine

Published

March 28, 2023

Pages

256 pages

Language

English

Publisher

Vintage

Available Formats & Prices

View on Amazon

Kindle

$13.99

Hardcover

$14.14

Paperback

$9.85

Audiobook

$0.00

Audio CD

Not found

About This Book

#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • From the indie rock sensation known as Japanese Breakfast, an unforgettable memoir about family, food, grief, love, and growing up Korean American—“in losing her mother and cooking to bring her back to life, Zauner became herself” (NPR). • CELEBRATING OVER ONE YEAR ON THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER LIST In this exquisite story of family, food, grief, and endurance, Michelle Zauner proves herself far more than a dazzling singer, songwriter, and guitarist. With humor and heart, she tells of growing up one of the few Asian American kids at her school in Eugene, Oregon; of struggling with her mother's particular, high expectations of her; of a painful adolescence; of treasured months spent in her grandmother's tiny apartment in Seoul, where she and her mother would bond, late at night, over heaping plates of food.

As she grew up, moving to the East Coast for college, finding work in the restaurant industry, and performing gigs with her fledgling band--and meeting the man who would become her husband--her Koreanness began to feel ever more distant, even as she found the life she wanted to live. It was her mother's diagnosis of terminal cancer, when Michelle was twenty-five, that forced a reckoning with her identity and brought her to reclaim the gifts of taste, language, and history her mother had given her. Vivacious and plainspoken, lyrical and honest, Zauner's voice is as radiantly alive on the page as it is onstage.

Rich with intimate anecdotes that will resonate widely, and complete with family photos, Crying in H Mart is a book to cherish, share, and reread.

Introduction

Michelle Zauner's "Crying in H Mart" offers an evocative journey through the interplay of identity, food, and the grief of losing one's closest kin. As a talented musician, Zauner delicately navigates through the complexities of her Korean-American identity, recounting both heartwarming and heart-wrenching tales of food and family. Her memoir invites readers to join her in a H Mart shopping aisle, as she confronts the bittersweet memories of meals shared with her mother, forging connections across generations.

This book is a profound reflection on how culture, memory, and loss intertwine, revealing the intricate tapestry of human emotions.

Key Takeaways

Michelle Zauner crafts a compelling exploration of identity through the lens of her Korean-American heritage and culinary traditions. Zauner's memoir poignantly addresses the universal experiences of loss and the enduring connections formed through food and family. The narrative intertwines personal anecdotes with broader introspections on culture revealing the power of memory in shaping self-perception.

Detailed Description

In "Crying in H Mart Michelle Zauner presents a raw and intimate memoir of a daughter grappling with her mother\'s passing. Through evocative prose she weaves tales of her childhood and adulthood establishing the enduring bond formed through shared meals and traditions. Zauner's profound exploration of her Korean-American identity intertwined with the grief and memories of her mother provides a poignant backdrop for a universal narrative of loss.

Her story unfolds through the aisles of H Mart where the aroma of Korean condiments invokes a tapestry of nostalgia and familial love. As the lead of Japanese Breakfast her dual identity straddles the world of music and the comforting embrace of Korean cuisine. Her poignant reflections reveal how food serves as a vessel for deeper connections across generations.

Throughout her memoir Zauner navigates life’s challenges with resilience and grace. Her lyrical storytelling uncovers the powerful ways in which culture and memory shape our lives offering a tender and moving tribute to the enduring impact of a mother’s love.

Standout Features

Michelle Zauner's narrative stands out through its visceral descriptions of food invoking a sensory feast that transcends mere writing into an experiential journey for readers The memoir seamlessly bridges the worlds of music and the culinary arts highlighting Zauner's unique ability to captivate audiences with her haunting melodies and heartfelt storytelling Crying in H Mart" touches the universal chords of loss and identity resonating deeply with readers who have grappled with similar life-changing experiences making it an unforgettable read.

Book Details

ISBN-10:

1984898957

ISBN-13:

978-1984898951

Dimensions:

5.2 x 0.75 x 7.95 inches

Weight:

12.6 ounces

Specifications

Pages:256 pages
Language:English
Published:March 28, 2023
Publisher:Vintage
Authors:Michelle Zauner

Rating

4.4

Based on 24604 ratings

Customer Reviews

Found in Translation

Verified Purchase
Regis
March 30, 2024

Philip Roth opens his memoir Patrimony: A True Story with a long and detailed description of his father's health that sets the stage for what is about to come: "My father had lost most of the sight in his right eye by the time he'd reached eighty-six, but otherwise he seemed in phenomenal health for a man of his age when he came down with what the Florida doctor diagnosed, incorrectly, as Bell's palsy, a viral infection that causes paralysis, usually temporary, to one side of the face." Michelle Zauner does the same, but in a much more concise way: "Ever since my mom died, I cry in H Mart." They are different, but they are the same: they are sparked by pain and suffering, they pay their respects to the ones who have gone and are missed, and they intensely connect with their roots, Jewish and Korean, respectively. And through them, Philip Roth and Michelle Zauner strive to heal their pain, using writing as therapy, no matter how different their success in that endeavor may have been. Michelle Zauner's writing may not be as ornamented as Philip Roth's, but her book is a treat all the same. Crying in H Mart is like listening to a candid confession from a close friend late at night, when everybody else has already left and you stay with her, a glass of wine and many stories. It is intimate, sincere, funny and sad, bittersweet, generously emotional. At the same time, it is also a gastronomic trip: Michelle meticulously uses traditional Korean food to connect and reconnect with her mother and her mother's relatives in Korea, and some descriptions of dishes, ingredients and dish preparations are as detailed as in a recipe book with mouth-watering pictures. There is even an almost literal transcription of one of Maangchi's tutorial videos, specifically the one where she prepares soothing jatjuk. By doing that, I think Michelle also tried to find roots in Asian references: take the Studio Ghibli movies with their beautiful scenes of food preparation, the importance of food in Haruki Murakami's novels or Bong Joon-Ho's movies. From my part, I am now a Maangchi fan. The text is extremely fluid, moving from the main plot involving Michelle's mother to flashbacks of her childhood and adolescence in a very logical and well-connected way. Up to mid-book (when the main plot sort of resolves itself), the text is so thought-of that it even sounds excessively edited--it is like a perfectly engineered, scientifically-paced Hollywood story: there is the punchline at the end of each chapter making reference to an idea cited before and causing a shiver to run up your spine, there's the perfect pacing from funny and comfy moments to describing delicious Korean food and then back to dramatic scenes, there is suspense and plot twists, all smooth and seamless. The last half of the book loses some of its stamina (except for a poignant scene at her parents-in-law's house in Bucks County, all Cinema Paradiso-like), but it is still charming, lyrical and beautiful. Philip Roth concludes his memoir concisely and in a rather bitter tone, with a short and dry sentence: "You must not forget anything." Michele grants us with a fluid, energetic and dreamlike last scene in a karaoke (noraebang), whose atmosphere made me think of Bill Murray and Scarlett Johanson in the karaoke scene in Lost in Translation, a strange simultaneous state of happiness and sadness. Indeed, this book is a testimony of Michelle's own "finding herself in translation", a funny feeling of being awkwardly out of context but even so pertaining, which is why this book seems to have resonated so much with many mixed-race children. Michelle trying her best to sing along Pearl Sister's Coffee Hanjan with her aunt Nami is indeed a beautiful image to conclude and summarize her search for her own identity by not denying but strengthening her Korean roots.

An Essential and Relevant Memoir

Verified Purchase
NikkiTikkiTavi
June 13, 2022

I generally do not read non-fiction because my primary purpose for reading is escapism. I want to go places and meet people that are far removed from my reality- where I know there will always be a happy ending. So, when a trusted friend suggested Crying in H Mart, I put it on my TBR without reading the synopsis or any reviews. I needed a non-fiction book to to earn a badge for my Prime Reading Spring Challenge, so I decided that this book would check that particular box. I had absolutely no idea just how much I needed to read this emotionally raw and poignant memoir. I have no knowledge of what growing up half-asian child in America feels like. But, as a black child of emigrant parents, I can identify with the disenfranchisement and the longing to fit in which Michelle Zauner so eloquently describes in this novel. As a daughter of a Mother who was brutally honest and lovingly hypercritical, I understood this writer's point of view. As a child whose mother's love language was cooking and serving food to feed as well as heal the soul, I loved experiencing the gastronomic journey Michelle and Chongmi traveled. As an woman who has lost her mother to the beast that is cancer, I appreciated the way that this author laid her most brutally painful feelings and memories bare for us, more than Ms. Zauner will ever know. I found myself reading this book and crying in the booth at Starbucks, overwhelmed with emotions that were latent and unresolved in the almost four years since my mother's death. I felt seen and understood for the first time in so many ways. Michelle Zauner writes with blatant honesty, humor, and humility. Her prose is so lyrical that I found myself flipping back to the cover in oder to make sure I was indeed reading a memoir. Her words are all necessary and cathartic for those who have ever served as care-givers for a treminally ill person. Any one who has had their family dynamic devastated by an unexpected malignant medical diagnosis will appeciate the care and detail that is used by this writer to describe the complete eviscerated that occurs when a loved one succumbs to the ir battle with a terminal disease. Crying in H Mart is a testimony that life and love do not end with the loss of a loved one. It is a true life reminder that the transformative power of love exceeds the human capacity to demonstrate it in mortal ways. I will recommend this book to others because its relevance transcends time and any other parameters influenced when a loved one physically leaves us to live life without them.