This week's book review is a strong echo of last week's review of the Pleasures of Tea. The Art of Taking Tea was published by the Editors of Victoria Magazine in 2002. It is again written by Kim Waller (who is again uncredited on the cover).
In much the same way as Pleasures, Art is loosely organized around three themes, but within each section, veers off topic into subjects that are vaguely, but not exactly related. Part one is sort of about the history of tea including the tea trade and the introduction to tea to the West. It includes information about the harvesting and the preparation of tea leaves, and then suddenly jumps to a section on silver tea wares and the Victorian custom of having an "at home" day.
Part two is about going out to tea and features three locations in particular: Tealuxe in Cambridge, MA, the café at Takashimaya in NYC (now closed), and Laudrée in Paris, most known for its colorful macarons (Does anyone go to Tealuxe? Will someone take me to Laudrée right now?). There are sections on tea at an English country house and how to have an Asian aesthetic at teatime at home.
Part three is about different occasions for tea: tea in bed, tea as a theme for an office party, tea picnics, tea and wedding celebrations, tea dances, etc.
The book is pleasant, inoffensive, but reads like a magazine in terms of overall flow. Somehow the title, "The Art of Taking Tea," is just one that sounds nice rather than what this book is clearly about. The pictures are lovely, but not captioned (I do love that pink Jasperware on the cover). The interviews are only in passing, and not long enough or in-depth enough to add. Interesting differences to note in this book, as opposed to Charms and Pleasures: there are no recipes, and by 2002, all of the businesses listed in the resources section have web addresses!
Next week: one more Victoria book to go - The Essential Tea Companion
1 comment:
I've been to Tealuxe in Cambridge a few times, both with Amy! and on my own. They used to have a nicer location on Newbury Street, but sadly it closed sometime in the last couple of years. It doesn't really have the tea room ambience, but the tea selection is excellent, the staff is knowledgeable, and they have nice snacks as well.
Kathleen
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