Thomasina Miers picks her favourite books

T

The Week UK

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The cook, food writer and restaurateur picks her favourites. Her latest book, "Mexican Table", is out now, and she will be speaking at the Queen's Park Book Festival on 31 August.

A Visit to Don Otavio​


Sybille Bedford, 1960
Bedford's first published work is an extraordinary travelogue chronicling her intrepid travels through Mexico in the 1950s. The descriptions of the food they eat at Don Otavio's are a sheer delight; it was the first time I had heard of another European extolling Mexican food, and I couldn't get enough of it.

The God of Small Things​


Arundhati Roy, 1997
A stunning novel about a pair of twins, about love, loss and the impact of colonialism. I am a twin, so this book felt acutely personal (I had also just come back from Kerala, where it is set). I grew up on Latin American magical realism, which chimes beautifully with Indian literature of the same style, so I was completely won over.

Ultra-Processed People​


Chris van Tulleken, 2023
So many have been trying for so long to shine a light on the dark, unhealthy secrets behind Big Food, but Chris van Tulleken has managed to blast through the attempts to stifle debate in this brilliant, focused book. A must-read.

The Girl with the Louding Voice​


Abi DarΓ©, 2020
I adored this tale of a Nigerian girl determined to throw off the chains put on her simply by virtue of being born a girl, and to find her voice through a tireless quest for an education.

Barnaby Rudge​


Charles Dickens, 1841
Love, social unrest, mob uprisings against the system, the lure of populism, and brilliant descriptions of poverty – this novel has it all. I have discovered Dickens late in life and this is one of my favourites.

Small Things Like These​


Claire Keegan, 2021
A beautiful gem of a novel about one man's bravery in standing up against an unjust system. I read it in a day.

Titles available at The Week Bookshop

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