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Hardcover No Reservations: Around the World on an Empty Stomach Book

ISBN: 1596914475

ISBN13: 9781596914476

No Reservations: Around the World on an Empty Stomach

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

288 pages This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

I adore Anthony Bourdain and the way he writes.

You must get this book if you like Anthony Bourdain...and who doesn't? The book arrived quickly and in excellent condition. I enjoyed it immensely. You will too.

Great Book

The book was in perfect condition. It came a bit later than expected, but was in the time frame of when they said it would arrive.

I Love Anthony Bourdain!!

I am a huge fan of No Reservations, so I was excited to read this book. I loved every page of it!! From the pictures, behind the scenes descriptions, meeting the crew, it was all fantastic.

Great Pictures!

I came from "A Cooks Tour" so I was expecting a lot of writing by Bourdain. I was pleasantly surprised to see that the book was full of images from when they were on site for shooting of "No Reservations" the TV show. So if you're expecting writing, don't. The pictures are great though, and paint a vivid picture of what it was like for Bourdain to tour the world.

In the unknown and unusual with Anthony Bourdain and his crew

I've been discovering that the more I learn about food and travel, the more I want to learn about it. Somehow, there is a part of my brain that just clicks into action when I get the opportunity to do either, and preferably, both at the same time. So when I hear, and better yet get my hands on, anything new by ranconteur and outlaw, Anthony Bourdain, everything gets tossed aside until I can indulge in his latest adventures. No Reservations: Around the World on an Empty Stomach, is his latest accounting of the strange and wonderful in the world around us. At first I thought it was going to be just another version of his splendid series of the same name on the Travel Channel. Happily, I was going to be surprised. This time, we are treated to an opulently illustrated and photographed look at Bourdain as he wends his way through five continents and many countries. Some of the places he went to would prove to surprise him, and full of colour and vibrancy, others were the last stop before hell, and one in particular would shake him up. Each place is accompanied by a short essay and captioned pictures, and while he doesn't mention everywhere he's been in the series so far, what he does include has a point to it. In addition to these travelouges, the reader gets to meet the hardworking and at times, suffering crew, that is with Bourdain on his crazed travels. Too, there are insights as to what is going on behind the scenes -- as when the episode is going rotten and there's nothing to stop it. Such as Iceland and Sweden, which are, bluntly, boring as hell and not much to do there besides get blasted out of one's skull. Or Namibia, one of the most awful places on Earth. To balance that, there's Japan, China, India, Vietnam -- Bourdain has clearly 'gone bamboo' as they say, and fallen head over heels for parts of Asia, and I suspect will be spending more of his time there. It's in these chapters that he waxes lyrical and his prose takes on a nearly poetic quality. And then, there is the section on Beruit. If you read just one section of the book, read this one. Arriving on the eve of renewed Israeli bombing, Bourdain and his crew find themselves thrust suddenly into a war zone, and they might not get out. If you've seen this particular episode, you know what I'm talking about. Bourdain has some of his strongest writing here, and he gets damn good with it, capturing the uncertainty, the confusion, and most of all the regret that two days has in it. This chapter alone is worth the price of the book. Then there is a lighter side to things to balance those dozen or so pages. Those who travel will find one section on bathrooms -- the best (Japan), and the worst (Uzbekistan) -- that is downright riotous. How to pack for a trip, and what is vital for survival -- hint: Imodium, an iPod, and aspirin are a necessity. How to find your way to the real food. How not to be an Ugly American. Most of all, Bourdain shows his respect for the ordinary people here, i

No Reservations: Around the World on an Empty Stomach Mentions in Our Blog

No Reservations: Around the World on an Empty Stomach in Portrait of a Culinary Rock Star
Portrait of a Culinary Rock Star
Published by Ashly Moore Sheldon • June 25, 2020

Today, Anthony Bourdain would have turned 64. Two years ago, the celebrity chef and author shocked many when he took his own life while on location in France shooting his TV show Parts Unknown. Here we remember the famously insurgent character who did everything on his own terms.

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