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The Dairy Restaurant

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Dairy Restaurant

Contributors:

By (Author) Ben Katchor

ISBN:

9780805242195

Publisher:

Schocken Books

Imprint:

Schocken Books

Publication Date:

10th March 2020

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Judaism: life and practice
History of religion

Dewey:

641.67

Prizes:

Short-listed for National Jewish Book Award 2020

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

496

Dimensions:

Width 163mm, Height 236mm, Spine 33mm

Weight:

794g

Description

From the award-winning author of Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer and The Jew of New York- a unique history of a beloved New York culinary institution that emerged in the late 19th century and had disappeared by the end of the 20th. For The Dairy Restaurant, Ben Katchor retells the history of where we choose to eat--a history that starts with the first man allowed to enter a walled garden and encouraged by the garden's owner to enjoy it's fruits.In this brilliant, sui generis book, Ben Katchor illuminates the unique historical confluence of events and ideas that led to the proliferation of the dairy restaurant in New York City. In words and his inimitable drawings, he begins with Adam, entering Eden and eating the fruits therein. He examines ancient protocols for offerings to the gods and the kosher milk-meat taboo. He describes the first vegetarian practice, the development of inns offering food to travelers, the invention of the restaurant, the rise of various food fads, and the intersection between culinary practice and radical politics. Here, too, is an encyclopedic directory of dairy restaurants that once thrived in New York City and its environs, evoked by Katchor's illustrations of classified advertisements, matchbooks, menus, and phone directory listings. And he ends on an elegiac note as he recollects his own experience in one of these unique restaurants just before it disappeared--as have all the dairy restaurants in the New York metropolitan area. PART OF THE JEWISH ENCOUNTERS SERIES

Reviews

Delectable . . . Obsessive, melancholy, and hungry-making . . . This dense cultural and culinary history is reason enough to come to The Dairy Restaurant. But Katchor, who made his name in the 1990s with his weekly comic strip Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer, and has won a MacArthur fellowship, has a sharp mind and a sly sense of humor. His words and his charcoal-palette drawings have a combinatory intelligence . . . There is a moving memoirish aspect to The Dairy Restaurant. A perambulator, Katchor has always been expert at capturing the texture and sociology of vanishing aspects of city life.
The New York Times

If youre facing an extended period of self-isolation, its a perfect read. Along with its physical heft,The Dairy Restaurantis philosophical and funny, authoritative and questioning, deeply Jewish and almost gleefully iconoclastic.
Forward

Ben Katchor sees into the life of everything he touches.The Dairy Restaurantis surely hiscapolavoro,an endless fund of news, digressions, wit, lore.He is a professor of the wayward fact, the lost particular, the hidden detail. Nothing fails to interest him. I want to sit next to nobody but him on mynext international flight.
Alexander Theroux, author ofDarconville's Cat

Ben Katchor has captured the spirit of old Jewish New York in his graphic novels such as Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer and The Jew of New York. The Dairy Restaurant isnt a typical graphic novel, though there is art. Instead its a fascinating hybrid format, part history/philosophy/rumination, part graphic imagery . . . As in all of Katchors books, The Dairy Restaurant lovingly chronicles and restores a vanishing cultural fixture for us. This time, though, hes added a thick lawyer of scholarship and though-provoking musings. He has served up a very satisfying dish here.
New York Journal of Books

"Astudiously constructed compendium of narrative history . . .Whoever truly captures the dairy restaurant, captures an entire lost world. Thats what Katchor has tried to do, and no one else could have done it."
Tablet

Colorful anecdotes, trivia, and food lore . . .An informative, nostalgic evocation of a special urban dining experience.
Kirkus Reviews

The Dairy Restaurant
also has the quality of an illuminated Haggadah.Because Katchor is a wonderful cartoonist, his book can be looked at as well as read. In that sense it is a chronicle of Katchors distinctively blocky yet delicate characters, drawn from the Hebrew Bible as well as history . . . Atrove of fun facts . . .Like much of Katchors work,The Dairy Restaurantis haunted by a sense of the vanished and ephemeral.
Book Forum

Both narrowly targeted and searchingly broad . . . Rewarding . . . This graphic history shows again Katchors gimlet eye for curious connections and obsessive attention to detail.
Publishers Weekly

Author Bio

BEN KATCHOR is the author of, among other books, Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer, The Cardboard Valise, and The Jew of New York. He was the first cartoonist to receive a MacArthur Fellowship. He has written several works of musical theater--including "The Rosenbach Company" and "The Slug Bearers of Kayrol Island." He teaches at Parsons/The New School in New York City, where he lives.

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