Famous Vegetarians and Their Favorite Recipes
Rynn Berry. Panjandrum Books, $12.95 (0pp) ISBN 978-0-915572-68-7
Biographies that praise and simplify to the point of insipidity, combined with fewer than 80 recipes (several with only circumstantial connections to their subjects) and Berry's relentlessly self-congratulatory description of his research (we're even told he has his own Greek lexicon) cause this book to drown in mediocrity. Berry ( The New Vegetarians ) divides 26 vegetarians into three categories: ``immortals,'' like Pythagoras and Christ; ``visionaries,'' such as 19th-century nutritionist Sylvester Graham and Diet for a Small Planet author Frances Moore Lappe; and ``contemporaries,'' like Cloris Leachman and I. B. Singer. Bronson Alcott's eccentricities are whitewashed almost out of recognition, and we even learn how George Bernard Shaw's oeuvre could have been improved: a Shaw play on vegetarianism might have started ``a worldwide dietary revolution.'' At least the savory rice and lentil curry comes from Shaw's own kitchen. That's preferable to the ``imaginative recreation'' of Leo Tolstoy's baked macaroni en casserole that banishes cheese in favor of tahini, bringing it in line with the nondairy diet preferences of Rynn Berry. (Jan.)
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Reviewed on: 01/30/1990
Genre: Nonfiction