Fuchsia Dunlop

Shark’s Fin and Sichuan Pepper

A Sweet-Sour Memoir of Eating in China

An examination of Chinese and Western attitudes toward food and each other.

After fifteen years spent exploring China and its food, Fuchsia Dunlop finds herself at her parents’ kitchen table in Oxford, deciding whether to eat a caterpillar she has accidentally cooked in some home-grown vegetables. How, she wonders, can something she has eaten readily in China seem nearly unthinkable to eat in England? This question lingers over her memoir.

What leads some Chinese people to enjoy the slither of shark’s fin and ox’s throat, which seem so alien to westerners? Do the Chinese really eat everything, and what does that tell us about their culture? What do our own culinary prejudices tell us about ours?

With stories and recipes from across China, Shark’s Fin and Sichuan Pepper is the long-awaited narrative nonfiction debut from one of the most gifted writers on Chinese food to emerge in recent years.


Fuchsia Dunlop writes for Gourmet, Saveur, the Financial Times, and Time Out. A graduate of Cambridge University and a fluent Mandarin speaker, she lives in London, where she consults to the city’s first authentic Sichuan restaurant, Bar Shu.

Shark's Fin and Sichuan Pepper book jacket

Author Web site:
FuchsiaDunlop.com


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April 2008 / hardcover / ISBN 978-0-393-06657-9
6 1/8" x 9 1/4" / 352 pages / Food Writing


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