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True Confections
True Confections: A Novel | Katharine Weber
2 posts | 1 read | 3 to read
Take chocolate candy, add a family business at war with itself, and stir with an outsider’s perspective. This is the recipe for True Confections, the irresistible new novel by Katharine Weber, a writer whose work has won accolades from Iris Murdoch, Madeleine L’Engle, Wally Lamb, and Kate Atkinson, to name a few. Alice Tatnall Ziplinsky’s marriage into the Ziplinsky family has not been unanimously celebrated. Her greatest ambition is to belong, to feel truly entitled to the heritage she has tried so hard to earn. Which is why Zip’s Candies is much more to her than just a candy factory, where she has worked for most of her life. In True Confections, Alice has her reasons for telling the multigenerational saga of the family-owned-and-operated candy company, now in crisis. Nobody is more devoted than Alice to delving into the truth of Zip’s history, starting with the rags-to-riches story of how Hungarian immigrant Eli Czaplinsky developed his famous candy lines, and how each of his candies, from Little Sammies to Mumbo Jumbos, was inspired by an element in a stolen library copy of Little Black Sambo, from which he taught himself English. Within Alice’s vivid and persuasive account (is her unreliability a tactic or a condition?) are the stories of a runaway slave from the cacao plantations of Côte d’Ivoire and the Third Reich’s failed plan to establish a colony on Madagascar for European Jews. Richly informed, deeply moving, and spiked with Weber’s trademark wit, True Confections is, at its heart, a timeless and universal story of love, betrayal, and chocolate. From the Hardcover edition.
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KellyK
True Confections: A Novel | Katharine Weber

Confession - I've yet to turn down a reading challenge.

Question - Do you allow yourself to use a book for more than one challenge?

In 2017 one of my goals was to use a book only once... I'm so close to finishing three challenges but don't know if I'll make it through any. Since my fascination with challenges is that they tend to make me a more diverse reader, I'm rethinking my whole "I can only use a book once" rationale... Thoughts?

shendrix413 I've overcommited myself to challenges next year too! I'm going to use the same book for more than one. I feel like it's OK because I'm already diversifying my reading and I don't think I'll finish any of them if I don't! 😂 don't want to get discouraged 6y
bookwrm526 This past year I only let myself overlap the category challenges with the AtoZ challenge - so if two different challenges required a book about immigration then I had to read two, but both could count toward my AtoZ 6y
bookwrm526 But, challenges are meant to be fun, so I would say go with whichever strategy is going to make you happiest!! 6y
dariazeoli I definitely overlap. I read so many books this year that I don‘t feel it‘s cheating 6y
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Liberty
True Confections: A Novel | Katharine Weber
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#RiotGrams, Day 10: Today's prompt is "books and candy." I smell books and candy, yeah... ???

Hrhadrienne Great. Guess what's stuck in my head now. 7y
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