Tag Archives: Bookish Chatter

Chatter about books, reading and anything related to either one.

Review: Butter

Butter book cover. A cow with a bloody handprint.

Butter
By Asako Yuzuki
Ecco, 9780063236417, October 2024, 464 pp.

The Short of It:

Can anyone live without butter? Yes, but why would you want to?

The Rest of It:

The cult Japanese bestseller about a female gourmet cook and serial killer, and the journalist intent on cracking her case, inspired by a true story~the publisher

Manako Kajii, held in a Tokyo detention house for the murders of businessmen, who she allegedly seduced with her delicious gourmet cooking. The case has piqued everyone’s interest. Who is this woman? What is her motive? She’s tight-lipped and refuses to speak to the press, even with the possibility of it helping her case.

Enter Rika Machida. A journalist, assigned to interview Kajii. Kajii wants nothing to do with the press and refuses all interviews until Rika sends her a message asking for her recipe for beef stew. Turns out the beef “stew” is really Beef Bourguignon. Rika is FAR from a chef. Barely able to piece together a ramen packet. She has no clue what she is stepping into but knows that if Kajii is going to talk, it’s going to be about food.

Rika’s introduction into foodie culture is slow, beginning with really delicious rice and lots of butter. Good butter. Imported butter. Butter that is hard to find due to a butter shortage. The richness that it imparts to food is second to none and Kajii makes Rika well aware of this.

As Rika experiments with food, she becomes Kajii’s muse as she delights in Kajii’s favorite meals and then reports back to her how the dish made her feel. This interaction allows Kajii to experience these dishes from the confinement of the detention center.

Rika’s relationship with Kajii spills into her relationships with her close friends and they begin to question her intentions. What started off as an interview opportunity turns into something else. These relationship are complicated, cushioned between delicious food.

If you are looking for a crime thriller type of read, I’d hesitate to recommend Butter. Kajii’s interactions with her victims are centered around food culture, living a certain way, and gazing deeply into not only her victims but those who choose to know her. There’s not much in the way of court proceedings or evidence collection. But, if food is your thing, you will literally eat this one up. I gained six pounds while reading this book. No lie.

Inspired by the real case of a convicted con woman and serial killer—the “Konkatsu Killer

Source: Borrowed
Disclosure: This post contains Bookshop.org affiliate links.

Review: Three Days in June

Three Days in June

Three Days in June
By Anne Tyler
Knopf, 9780593803486, February 11, 2025, 176 pp.

The Short of It:

Anne Tyler. Always a pleasure.

The Rest of It:

Gail Baines loses her job and then discovers that her bride-to-be daughter is in crisis mode. Something has happened to make her question her relationship. Because it’s the weekend of the wedding, Gail’s ex-husband Max is also in town and hits Gail up last minute for a place to crash, and he just happens to have a foster cat with him.

A wedding weekend filled with rehearsals and meals. The ex, well-liked but quirky and with a cat no less. Debbie. the bride-to-be, darting around busily as the wedding ensues. How can Gail rein this in? Can she? Is it even her place to do so?

Gail is a likable character. Not all that confident in her “mother-of-the-bride” status but she tries. She wants to do right by her daughter, and to remind her that if there are any doubts, that it’s okay to back out now. That it doesn’t matter that everyone has arrived for this thing. But then Gail is reminded of her own infidelity and how people can make mistakes and still be good people.

This is a whirlwind type of read. As a reader, you are invested in this story quickly and it’s tied up in much the same way, quickly. The writing is what earns stars here. Tyler’s characters always posses that quirky something-something that makes them interesting. I enjoyed it a lot. Almost felt it was too short.

Source: Borrowed
Disclosure: This post contains Bookshop.org affiliate links.