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Sweet and Low: A Family Story

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Sweet and Low is the amazing, bittersweet, hilarious story of an American family and its patriarch, a short-order cook named Ben Eisenstadt who, in the years after World War II, invented the sugar... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

An American Classic

This book is large. In it, the writer, Rich Cohen, disinherited from the vast sweet n low fortune, comes to see the history of his family, and the history of our time, in the little white granules that sweeten our coffee, but leave a bitter aftertaste. It is told with panache and humor, and also with a great deal of compassion, even toward those who did his side of the family wrong. It is an American story as old as the west, or as old as the Great Gatsby. It is the story of the American dream, and what happens when that dream comes true. It is a be careful what you wish for story, or, as my grandmother used to say, "We were happier when we were poor."

WANTING MORE

Almost every decade a work is published that rivits our eyes to its pages and feeds an urge for more. Such a book is "SWEET AND LOW" by Rich Cohen. What makes it so appealing is that at its core is the nucleor Eisenstadt family. The titular head is Benjamin Eisenstadt who gave us the sugar substitute SWEET N' LOW. The real power in this matriarchy, however is his wife Betty who believed that love is a scarce commodity that could be depleted and so should be doled out sparingly. Author Cohen has taken hard facts (uncovered through research and interviews) and made them come alive, giving us memorable portraits of Ben and Betty's children: the reclusive yet controlling Aunt Gladys, Unknowing Uncle Marvelous, morally constipated Uncle Ira and finally his caring and naive mother Ellen, who is an easy mark for her greedy siblings. After Ben died, his wife inexplicably changed their will disinheriting Ellen and her issue, one of whom is Rich Cohen. Ah ha! This should explain the author's motive, but surprisingly his prose is even handed, objective and supported by concrete evidence. Above all, "SWEET AND LOW" ia a ripping read that is not only funny, but provocative. At the end you find yourself wanting more -- especially the answers to these questions: 1. Why was Rich's Mom and her children "really" disenherited? 2. Why did Uncle Marvelous compared to Martha Stewart and Leona Helsley, get off so lightly? 3. What else did the author find out that he left out or was edited from the book (page 12, "No, no. It's fine. He's not asking about that.")? Having listened to Mr. Cohen on NPR bemoan the loss of his extended family and re-reading the end of this book, I believe there's more to be told. So perhaps he can give us "the rest of the story" with a sequel, "SWEET AND LOW - PART II." Very highly recommended.

Granddad made $100,000,000 and all I got was this stupid shirt

What a great read! You almost can't put it down long enough to think, "What if my grandparents had a hundred million dollars and left me nothing?" But that's just as well, because by the end of the book, you know exactly how that kind of thing turns out. The fulcrum of the story--both in terms of the dynamics of the family and also as their most neatly distilled image--is Aunt Gladys, who lives reclusively in her frigid brooklyn bedroom (she keeps it at meat locker temperatures) and, though partially crippled, still waits on her emotionally withholding mother; amid Cohen's delightfully comedic descriptions, Gladys is a ghoul who wanders in off the heath: Gladys, who ties up and strikes her own mother; Gladys, who in her frigid inner-sanctum has recreated the conditions of the womb that bore her. Gladys and her mom are worth many tens of millions of dollars, but, as the saying goes, there are something things that money just can't buy. One of the most fascinating parts of the book is the scandal that the Sweet & Low company got caught up in. Cohen shows that money is just as corrosive to the brain as it is to the soul, as he chronicles how his uncle "Marvelous" Marvin Eisenstadt brought an organized crime figure into the business, was raided by the FBI, and nearly lost the whole kitty. Cohen writes that the one benefit he has derived from being disinherited is the ability to write this book (and it is a great story), but his real fortune is in having been delivered from the influence of these people at an early age, and thus, having been given the ability to lead a happy and normal life.

Sweet, sour, bitter and salty....all in one!

Rich Cohen's new book "Sweet and Low" is a breezy and fun-filled romp through the broken fragments of a family that has more ditzy characters than an offbeat novel. The author states on the back cover, "to be disinherited is to be set free" and in his liberation the readers of his book have much about which to cheer. Cohen is wickedly humorous and spares no one and no detail. He gives "dysfunction" a new name. Ostensibly a story about the discovery of the first widely used sugar substitute, the Cumberland Packing Corporation which packages it and the company's successes and failures, "Sweet and Low" is really about the men and women in the Eisenstadt/Cohen family and what life was like under the surface. Patriarch Benjamin Eisenstadt, the hard luck/good luck founder of the company is the rock that holds the family together. Beyond that, look out. There's the agoraphobic, housebound Aunt Gladys, Uncle ("marvelous") Marvin, the eternal man-child son of Ben, vitriolic grandma Betty and suicidal great-grandma, Bubba. Reading "Sweet and Low" is like watching a tv variety show without the tv. Yet it is author Cohen who really puts everything in perspective. What makes this book so enjoyable is the writing and it is, indeed, very good. Cohen has a way of not only grabbing the reader's attention, but holding it, then guiding it through the twists and turns of his family's "behavior". It is a tour de force. While the author allows himself some bitter feelings (perhaps more wistful, had everyone gotten along) he nonetheless has some nice things to say. His ability to stick the knife in cleanly is balanced by a notion that while people may have bad attributes they aren't necessarily bad people. "Sweet and Low" could have been just a kiss-and-tell book about a family gone awry. It's much better than that and it's due to Rich Cohen and his marvelous way of telling the family story. I loved "Sweet and Low" and encourage readers to purchase a copy and enjoy it.

A memoir for everyone

Normally I steer clear of non-fiction, but I couldn't help picking up this book. It is a great read. It's not just about sweet n'low, either, although you'll learn lots. It's about family, brooklyn, the mob, the yin of the sugar industry, and the yang of the diet industry. It is much, much more than a memoir; it's about America and the 20th century experience. The family story woven into this is as compelling as it is devastating. I think everyone can identify with all the pieces of the story, which Cohen weaves into a seamless whole. Unlike the pink packets, this "Sweet and Low" will leave you satisfied.
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