<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>I could not have written <i>A Cook's Tour</i> without this book. There is so much I would have missed. So dig in. Enjoy...Eat. Eat adventurously. Miss nothing. It's all here in these pages. <b>--From the Foreword by Anthony Bourdain</b> <p/>Sit down for a meal with the locals on six continents--what they eat may surprise you. <i>Extreme Cuisine</i> examines eating habits across the global neighborhood, showing once and for all that road kill in one culture is restaurant fare in another! <p/>I've tried to make this book a guide to how the other half dines and why. Over a period of twenty-five years I've augmented my meat-and-potatoes upbringing in the United States to try a wide variety of regional specialties, from steamed water beetles, fried grasshoppers and ants, to sparrow, bison and crocodile. I've eaten deep-fried bull's testicles in Mexico, live shrimp sushi in Hawaii, mice cooked over an open wood fire in Thailand, pig stomach soup in Singapore, minced water buffalo and yak butter tea in Nepal, stir-fried dog tongue, and 'five penis wine' in China.<b> --From the introduction by Jerry Hopkins</b> <p/>Dive headfirst into food culture from around the world. Join author Jerry Hopkins on a culinary and cultural tour as he explores foods that may seem bizarre, and often off-putting, to us. As he says, What is considered repulsive to someone in one part of the world, in another part of the world is simply considered lunch. <p/>Part travelogue, part cultural commentary and history, and part cookbook (yes, really), with <i>Extreme Cuisine</i> anyone can become an adventurous eater--or at least learn what it's like to be one. <p/><b>Chapters include: </b><ul><li>Mammals</li><li>Reptiles & Water Creatures</li><li>Birds</li><li>Insects, Spiders & Scorpions</li><li>Plants</li><li>Leftovers</li></ul><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>...a visually stunning volume that is part history, part travelogue and part cookbook. <b>--<i>AsiaWeek</i></b><br><br>...an informative if stomach-turning tour de gastronome. Make sure you chow down first; you won't be hungry afterwards.<b> --<i>Time Magazine</i></b><br><br>...you have to love a book with chapters titled Ears, Eyes, Noses, Lungs, Tongues, Lips, Gums, Glands and Feet. Well maybe love is too strong a word, but if you want to read about food while squirming as if at a horror movie, <i>Extreme Cuisine</i> will do it for you. <b>--<i>The Los Angeles Times</i></b><br><br><i>No One Here Gets Out Alive</i>...is Hopkin's most famous book. Seems like he could have used the same title here. <b>--<i>Playboy</i></b><br><br>A weird and wonderful book. <b>--<i>The Wall Street Journal</i></b><br><br>I couldn't have written Cook's Tour without this book. <b>--Anthony Bourdain</b><br><br>It's delightfully disgusting. <b>--<i>Outside</i></b><br><br>Perhaps this is the best food book for your friend on a diet. <b>--<i>Honolulu Magazine</i></b><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Jerry Hopkins</b> (1935-2018) published over 1,000 magazine articles and 38 books, including international bestsellers: <i>No One Here Gets Out Alive: The Biography of Jim Morrison, </i> and <i>Elvis: The Biography</i>. A pioneering correspondent and contributing editor for <i>Rolling Stone</i>, Hopkins developed a strong reputation as a travel writer while living in Bangkok, and regularly wrote for publications such as <i>The New York Times</i> and <i>Conde Nast Traveler</i>, and published many books, including <i>Bangkok Babylon</i> and <i>Thailand Confidential</i>. <p/>Foreword writer: <br><b>Anthony Bourdain</b> (1956-2018) was host of the Travel Channel's <i>Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations</i>, a 28-year veteran of professional kitchens, and the executive chef at New York's famed bistro, <i>Les Halles</i>. He is the author of several books, including the critically acclaimed <i>Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly</i>, an international best-seller. <p/>Photographer: <br><b>Michael Freeman</b> is a professional photographer and author, with more than 100 book titles to his credit. He was born in England in 1945, took a Masters in geography at Brasenose College, Oxford University, and then worked in advertising in London for six years. He made the break from there in 1971 to travel up the Amazon with two secondhand cameras, and when Time-Life used many of the pictures extensively in the Amazon volume of their <i>World's Wild Places</i> series, including the cover, they encouraged him to begin a full-time photographic career. <p/>Since then, working for editorial clients that include all the world's major magazines, and notably the <i>Smithsonian Magazine</i> (with which he has had a 30-year association, shooting more than 40 stories), Freeman's reputation has resulted in more than 100 books published. Of these, he is author as well as photographer, and they include more than 40 books on the practice of digital photography--for this photographic educational work he was awarded the Prix Louis Philippe Clerc by the French Ministry of Culture. He is also responsible for the distance-learning courses on photography at the UK's Open College of the Arts.
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