Bread Alone: Summary and book reviews of Bread Alone by Judith Ryan Hendricks, plus links to an excerpt from Bread Alone and a biography of Judith Ryan Hendricks.
Bread Alone
by Judith Ryan Hendricks
Hardcover: Jun 2001,
352 pages.
Paperback: May 2002,
368 pages.
A deliciously magical and mouthwatering debut, Bread Alone is the uplifting journey of a woman whose entire life changes course when her husband announces one evening that their marriage no longer works for him.
Not suited for teaching high school and hopeless at selling real estate, thirty-one-year-old Wynter Morrison long ago gave up trying to find a suitable career and drifted into the role of a trophy wife -- mainly to suit her husband's desires. An ambitious advertising executive, David had encouraged Wyn to spend her days among other society wives at wine tastings, French films, and trendy restaurants -- improving their social Rolodex and his array of business contacts. So, after seven years of marriage, when David informs Wyn that he feels confined and that their marriage was a mistake, she is left emotionally devastated and without direction, wondering how she let herself become so dependent.
Desperate for a change of scenery, Wyn leaves behind her posh, pampered life in Hancock Park and ventures north to Seattle, where she spends aimless hours at a local bakery, sipping coffee and inhaling the sweet aroma of freshly made bread. These visits bring back memories of her apprenticeship at a French boulangerie, when her passion for bread-making nearly led her to leave college to become a baker. Once again the desire and ambition to bake bread consumes Wyn's thoughts, and when offered a position at the bakery, Wyn quickly accepts, grateful for the comfort of a routine.
Arriving at the bakery just before midnight and working long hours among the bakery's cluster of eclectic women -- Linda, the irascible bread baker; earth mother Ellen and her partner Diane; Tyler, the blue-haired barista -- Wyn awakens to the truths that she missed while living the good life in Hancock Park. And soon she discovers that making bread -- the kneading of the dough, the heat from the ovens -- possesses an unexpected and wondrous healing power, helping her to rediscover that nothing stays the same: bread rises, pain fades, the heart heals, and the future beckons.
Inspiring and beautifully rendered , Bread Alone is an uplifting debut novel -- dusted in the gentlest of magic, full of humor, and guaranteed to warm the heart.
An intelligent woman's beach book - recommended for home and away.
Media Reviews
Booklist - Neal Wyatt
The various points of view provided by the wide cast of characters into the modern quest for contentment imbue the novel with lightning fast revelations of how life gets crafted day by day. The result is a novel that is fun to read and meaningful to remember--no small feat at all.
Library Journal - Robin Nesbitt
Hendricks's engaging first novel will appeal to fans of a good story and intriguing characters. Highly recommended.
Publishers Weekly
Inspiring and beautifully rendered , Bread Alone is an uplifting debut novel -- dusted in the gentlest of magic, full of humor, and guaranteed to warm the heart.
The Sunday Times - Elizabeth Buchan
[A] warm-hearted novel of a woman coming to terms with the disintegration of her upmarket marriage and with her new life working in a bakery. The novel's prevailing tone is sassy, but it is never facile, often funny and conveys a convincing sense of the pain of being abandoned.
The Observer (UK)
This is a romance, really, but one for bookish feminists, and a luscious read; it's pure escapism for those who don't want to think but can.
Diane's Books, Greenwich, CT
...this delicious, crusty, filled with surprises first novel is perfection.
Jo-Ann Mapson, LA Times best-selling author of Bad Girl Creek
Thank goodness Judi Hendricks has arrived to write us splendid new novels chock-full of love, struggle, and the wisdom that comes along with the journey. Her writing is graceful, funny, poignant--and best of all, she is a master of women's stories.
Recent Reader Reviews
Rated of 5
by Billie Zahurak
Bread Alone is a beautiful book! It’s a wonderful first novel from Judi Hendricks from whom I hope to hear much more. You cannot imagine the warm and cozy feelings that simply radiate from the book while you’re reading it. Our book club chose it... Read More
By turns meditative and funny, frightening, witty and refreshingly wise, Lucky Strike explores the ways that language simply put can mine the inexpressible. In the process, a young widow and her two children learn much about uranium but even more about the nature of the love that binds them.
A heartstrong story of family and romance, tribulation and tenacity, set on the High Plains east of Denver.
These are 2 of the 6 readalike suggestions for Bread Alone. Members have full access to all readalikes. If you are a member, please login. To find out more about membership, click here.
Fearless, gripping, at once darkly funny and tender, spanning three continents and numerous lives, Americanah is a richly told story set in today's globalized world.
The story of an American family, middle class in middle America, ordinary in every way but one. But that exception is the beating heart of this extraordinary novel.
First time novelist Vaddey Ratner captured my heart and senses in this novel based on her childhood in Cambodia. Her story transcends any news story...
read more
From the first page, I was drawn in by the lyrical writing of the author and mesmerized as the narrator, eight year old Raami, remembered the years...
read more
Trite but true, all good things must come to an end. I so wanted to keep reading the wonderful prose, the settings that let one think they are part...
read more
Kenn Nesbitt is new Children's Poet Laureate(Jun 12 2013) Kenn Nesbitt has been named the new Children's Poet Laureate: Consultant in Children's Poetry to the Poetry Foundation, which noted that the two-year position...
Full Story