Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Wine Books » Spirits » A Hedonist in the Cellar: Adventures in Wine (Vintage)  
The Oenophile Network Blog & Forum Links
Wine Blog
Wine Forum
Categories
Wine Glasses
Wine Books
Wine Decanters
Wine Periodicals
Wine Openers
Buckets & Chillers
Stoppers & Pourers
Wine Education & Fun
Wine Accessories
Wine Racks
Wine DVDs
Gourmet Gifts
Artisan Cheeses
Other Books
Other DVDs
Other Home & Garden
Other Kitchen
Related Categories
• Spirits
Drinks & Beverages
Cooking, Food & Wine
Subjects
• Wine & Winemaking
Wine
Drinks & Beverages
Cooking, Food & Wine
• Cellars
Wine
Drinks & Beverages
Cooking, Food & Wine
• General
Cooking, Food & Wine
Subjects
Books
• Qualifying Textbooks
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
Books
• General AAS
New & Used Textbooks
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
• Paperback
Binding (binding)
Refinements
Books
• Printed Books
Format (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books

A Hedonist in the Cellar: Adventures in Wine (Vintage)

A Hedonist in the Cellar: Adventures in Wine (Vintage)

zoom enlarge 
Author: Jay Mcinerney
Publisher: Vintage
Category: Book

List Price: $14.00
Buy New: $7.91
You Save: $6.09 (44%)



New (29) Used (10) from $7.65

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 72434

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 272
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.1 x 0.6

ISBN: 1400096375
Dewey Decimal Number: 641.22
EAN: 9781400096374
ASIN: 1400096375

Publication Date: November 6, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Order with confidence. Code: B20080906212818T

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - A Hedonist in the Cellar: Adventures in Wine

Similar Items:

  • Bacchus & Me: Adventures in the Wine Cellar
  • Red, White, and Drunk All Over: A Wine-Soaked Journey from Grape to Glass
  • The Oxford Companion to Wine, 3rd Edition
  • Adventures on the Wine Route: A Wine Buyer's Tour of France
  • Judgment of Paris: California vs. France and the Historic 1976 Paris Tasting That Revolutionized Wine

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Those who find most wine writing hopelessly recondite will eagerly quaff novelist Jay McInerney's A Hedonist in the Cellar, a collection of his essays originally published in House & Garden. Whether talking about a California chardonnay ("like a Ginsu blade concealed in a peach"); the wines of the Cote Rotie ("like Fitzgerald, [its] reputation was almost moribund at mid-century"); or the super Valpolicellas of Italian vintner Giuseppe Quintarelli ("his [wines] should be opened only in the presence of gods and stinky cheeses"), McInerney brings a novelist's gift and idiosyncratic wit to his personal investigations, which touch on the Rieslings from the Finger Lakes, the "forgotten whites" of Bordeaux, new developments in the wines of Chile and Argentina, spirits like Armagnac and artisinal champagnes, and much more. McInerney is a stimulating appreciator, so readers poring through his essays happily absorb viniculture and modus operandi, among other technical matters. In essays like "Translating German Labels" and "How to Impress Your Sommelier," they're also prepped in buying and ordering. A wide-ranging tour of the wine world in sum, Hedonist is for all wine lovers, who will find in it much of what's been missing from so much other wine and food writing: the wit to do it well. --Arthur Boehm

Product Description
In A Hedonist in the Cellar, Jay McInerney gathers more than five years’ worth of essays and continues his exploration of what’s new, what’s enduring, and what’s surprising–giving his palate a complete workout and the reader an indispensable, idiosyncratic guide to a world of almost infinite variety.Filled with delights oenophiles everywhere will savor, this is a collection driven not only by wine itself but also the people who make it.

An entertaining, irresistible book that is essential for anyone enthralled by the myriad pleasures of wine.



Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Education With Humor   July 10, 2008
This is a fabulous book for wine lovers, from beginners to connoisseurs. The series of vignettes are funny and very informative. We're pretty far along with wine, but we learned a lot of great stuff while being entertained. It's a book you want to give all your wine-loving friends for Christmas.


4 out of 5 stars All about a really good wine   November 15, 2007
Click on book
cover to order
at Amazon.com

Reviewed by Joyce Sparrow

Onophiles and grocery store wine shoppers will do well breaking out an atlas to follow the world-wide wine adventures of fiction writer and House and Garden wine columnist Jay McInerney as he travels from California to France and many European stops to learn more about the enjoyment of wine. Readers will want a note pad and pencil at their sides to jot down McInerney's many wine suggestions.

These 52 essays show the knowledge McInerney has gained since his early years in Syracuse, New York where, as a graduate student in writing, he spent many hours as a clerk at the local cordial shop, which he refers to as a boozeteria, two miles from Syracuse University. In between frequent customers and a few armed robberies, McInerney spent many of his shifts reading the shop owner's viticulture books. Later in his career as a novelist, he was given a chance to write the House and Garden wine column, which led to his opportunity to learn the details behind how some of the best wines and wineries came to be. His column continues today.

Foremost, McInerney is a storyteller who entertains readers with tales about his wine discoveries. Many of the essays take the confusion out of wine pairing. "Odd Couples" explains how Champagne goes well with most Japanese food. In "What to Drink with Chocolate" McInerney finds the best wine to pair with chocolate. "Fish Stories from Le Bernadin" proves eight out of ten sea creatures prefer white wine to red. McInerney captures the culture of the vineyards and relays the history of wines from the Catholic monks to present day viticulturists.

Much to his credit, McInerney downplays his growing expertise to reach the common wine drinker. He offers advice on how to impress the restaurant sommelier and even offers guidance on the correct pronunciation of the word: some-el-yay.

Overall, this collection provides a fun education for the average person who enjoys an occasional glass of really good wine.

Armchair Interviews says: Recommended for the novice and expert wine drinker alike.



3 out of 5 stars One for the spit bucket   August 16, 2007
 8 out of 11 found this review helpful

"Sir, a woman preaching is like a dog walking on his hind legs. It is not done well but you are surprised to find it done at all."-Samuel Johnson

I want to get one thing straight before I begin: I wouldn't know Jay McInerny from Hugh McElhenny, so I don't want anyone to think that this review is colored by my previous experience with McInerny as a novelist or anything else. I understand this book is a compilation of short articles he wrote for the magazine House & Garden over a five-year span in the early part of this decade, although there are no dates on individual entries. That's too bad, because in 2007 there's virtually nothing new in the entire book, and if it turned out he wrote them all, let's say, in the period between 2000-2001, at least we'd know he was blazing some new ground at the time and it just took the rest of us a while to catch up. Instead I would describe the net effect as a romp through very well trodden territory with a half-baked, way-too-clever-for-his-own-good guide.

In the introduction, McInerny informs us that he came by his gig at House and Garden by accident, when a friend and editor suggested he combine his growing passion for the grape with his writing. Hence the Johnson quote above- should we be impressed that a novelist knows anything about wine, or perhaps go with the flow and quote Maximus from Gladiator, dripping blood in the center of the arena and shouting, "are you not entertained?"

My standard-bearer in this genre is Gerald Asher, who for 30 years has written brilliantly incisive articles about wine in Gourmet (The Pleasures of Wine). I know Gerald Asher, at least his wine writing, and Jay McInerny, Sir, is no Gerald Asher.

I'm going to begin my serious critique with the most nitpicky of comments. I hate typos and errata in books about wine. Maybe no one can tell when typos occur in a novel. But they are well nigh inexcusable in any work where people are theoretically relying on the author for accuracy and a minimal level of expertise. I refuse to accept the claim that a wine writer of any caliber understands his subject if he can't spell a place name right or spend the time to proofread, even if he once identified a bottle of '82 Haut Brion blind. Here are just two examples (curiously, both blunders I noticed relate to Italy, which, like Rome, seems to be where many unskilled wine gladiators go to die.) (1) Gamberro or Gambero? The famous Italian wine guide Gambero Rosso is spelled both ways within two pages. (2) Somewhere he refers to the town of Spoleto but it's written Spoleta, which is doubly unfortunate because it actually has nothing to do with wine-it's an Umbrian town famous for its annual classical music festival, also mirrored in Charleston, SC. My point is, what else in here is a trap for people who think he's trustworthy? Were these names misspelled in the magazine and someone just hit the copy and paste key? On a related note, why is a chapter entitled "The Maserati of Champagne" not placed in a section of the book called "Bubbles and Spirits?" The whole effort comes across as casual, superficial and sloppy, like maybe he was still drunk while he was writing and never went back for a fact check-hell, it's not a novel, after all.

But the two main reasons I found myself increasingly wincing as he pranced along were more significant. First, I suppose it goes with the territory, but I have to say I found his frequent use of metaphors, especially literary ones, both pretentious and unreliable. There are multiple references to wines as sports cars, including Maserati (see above), Ferrari and Mercedes-never linked to the country of the wine's origin- but unfortunately no steady, dependable Civics that can give you a lot of mileage for everyday consumption. Different first-growth Bordeaux are stylistically Turgenevs, Tolstoys and Dostoyevskys-at least he can spell them right-though I have no idea what he's talking about. A poor South African winemaker is described as "the gruff Charles Barkley-sized black sheep of the family," which is such an unintentionally inappropriate and hilarious analogy I had to include it even if it doesn't refer to a wine. I can't wait for his book on basketball.

Which brings me to the final complaint. Perhaps the book's most annoying feature is the seemingly random perspective the individual essays take relative to the reader's presumed knowledge of wine. I'm sure many will have already decided I'm an unrepentant geek of some kind because I don't appreciate the wit and accessibility on display here, or that I'm focusing on the bad instead of the good, but I would think that McInerny owes it to his readers to talk to them at a consistent level instead of a voice that's literally and figuratively all over the map. From one paragraph or essay to another he either speaks to the audience in an instructive and engaging tone like he was the grand prize in a "win an evening with Jay McInerny" winetasting sweepstakes for H&G subscribers, or he prattles on with the most abstruse, incomprehensible name-dropping drivel about wines that only a billionaire can afford.

Just to show this is a balanced review, I will credit the author for trying to sprinkle most essays with a few recommended examples of whatever he's talking about. When exploring the wide world of wine, we all need someone we can Lichine on, and if you want to, you can Lichine on he. Although I hate to see it in print, I must also give him credit for outing the fabulous though increasingly expensive wines of Montefalco's Paolo Bea.

I'm about done here. My recommendation would be for you to try to read a few of the short chapters before you buy this book to see if it hits the mark for you. But if I were writing in the clever McInerny style, I'd be compelled to return to my opening and say something like, while Hugh McElhinney made it into the football Hall of Fame, this book is going into my wine writing hall of shame



4 out of 5 stars More juicy adventures in the cellar.   May 18, 2007
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

"Let's be honest: there's only one activity more satisfying than drinking good wine with good food, and if you're drinking wine in the right company, the one pleasure, more often than not, will lead to the other" (p. xxiii). For novelist, amateur oenephile, and avid reader, Jay McInerney, Bordeaux is to Tolstoy as Burgundy is to Turgenev as Cote Rotie is to Fitzgerald as Hermitage is to Hemingway. Oenophilia, he observes in this second compilation of essays drawn from his "Uncorked" column in House & Garden magazine, is "a way of channeling the hedonistic impulse of refining and intellectualizing it to some extent . . . It can provide intellectual as well as sensual pleasure; it's an inexhaustible subject, a nexus of subjects, which leads us, if we choose to follow, into the realm of geology, botany, meterorology, history, aesthetics, and literature. Ideally, the appreciation of wine is balanced between consumption and pleasure on the one hand and contemplation and analysis on the other (p. xiv).

Whether he's writing about his favorite white (Condrieu) or his first taste of Bordeaux, the forgotten whites of Bordeaux or the South African reds, how to impress your sommelier or how to pair a wine with chocolate or Asain food, McInerney once again proves he is "the best wine writer in America" (Salon), bringing his own unique gift of terroir, wit, and opinion to these pleasurable essays. His HEDONIST is a must read for anyone who, like me, has a passion for really good wine and really good writing.

G. Merritt



4 out of 5 stars attention wine geeks   February 11, 2007
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Though not as entertaining as" Bacchus and Me: Adventures in the Wine Cellar" , I still enjoyed the book. Lot of short pieces on various wine and alcohol related subjects....and who doesn't love that!? Probably not for you if your not geeky about wine but if you are so inclined a vicarious pleasure.

Powered by Associate-O-Matic

Customer Service
Contact Customer Service
Ordering
Tracking Your Package
Shipping Information
Domestic Shipping Rates
International Shipping Rates
Returns
Gifts & Gift Certificates
Privacy & Security
Subcategories
All Titles
Arts & Photography
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Engineering
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
General AAS
Home & Garden
Literature & Fiction
Medicine
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Science
Teens
Travel
Mass Market
Trade
Untitled Document Disclaimer: This is an Amazon storefront - the products referenced on this site are manufactured and sold by parties other than the Oenophile Network. The Oenophile Network makes no representations regarding either the products or any information vendors offer about their products. Any questions, complaints, or claims regarding the products must be directed to the appropriate manufacturer or vendor, or to Amazon.com.