The beginning of The Chef’s Secret starts a bit slowly, or maybe I was just disappointed that it wasn’t set in ancient Rome like Feast of Sorrow. (I didn’t read the NetGalley blurb, I just saw by Crystal King and immediately requested it.) But I like medieval Italy too, with all the dramatic poisonings and vendetta, and this is exactly that style of drama.

Kitchen apprentice Giovanni isn’t too surprised to inherit his Uncle Bartolomeo’s kitchen tools and recipe books.  But he’s shocked to see how much money his uncle the chef has left him, and he’s also been left the guardian of several coded diaries that Bartolomeo wants burned.

Naturally, Giovanni doesn’t burn any of his uncle’s journals. and that leads him down a path of forbidden romance, theft, secret children, kidnapping, revenge, and lots of murder. The story of Bartolomeo’s youth starts out with a sweet crush on an unattainable noblewoman, which blossoms into secret romance, and grows more and more dramatic, until a pope gets murdered in cold blood, and I was basically reading and nodding along, like yeah, that’ll happen.  Gotta watch out for secret chambers and poison rings. Gotta watch out for generations of vendetta.

Despite the rising body count, the novel’s not gross, though. Sometimes I can’t handle thrillers because I don’t like when people’s internal organs are on the outside (which is quite a reasonable standard for entertainment, although slightly awkward for the wife of a horror writer). This book had a lot of tension (POISON AND VENDETTA!!!) without being gory, and the tension never came from my fear that the story was about to turn gory.

You’ll need a snack, or five, while you read this. Crystal King describes Giovanni and Bartolomeo’s dishes with delicious details.

Overall, this is a solid page-turner, with warm and believable characters, a historical drama set just down the hall from the more famous histories of the popes.

 

This is my Review of the Month for the review collection on LovelyAudiobooks.info

 

 

View Comments

  • “Gotta watch out for secret chambers and poison rings. Gotta watch out for generations of vendetta.”

    100% true.

    Great review! Now I want to go back and read the previous one too!

  • I prefer a thriller with less blood and gore, too, so this one sounds great. Especially love the setting.

    • Yeah, I'm really into suspenseful but NOT bloody or gory novels right now, and it's pretty difficult to find. I want to feel scared about what's going to happen next but I never want to see internal organs.

  • Wow a food book that's also a thriller - seems like a winning combination. I'm with you on not liking blood and gore in books. I end up skipping it all out.

    • Yeah! If it's too gory, I DNF, I cant' even skip around it. And it can be hard to find a suspenseful, dramatic story without any guts or gore!

Recent Posts

Doomsday Book

Connie Willis’s Doomsday Book combines science fiction and historical fiction in a time travel drama,…

An Echo in the City

An Echo in the City, by K.X. Song, is new YA fiction set in the…

The Last One

When The Last One, by Will Dean, opens, Caroline/Caz and her boyfriend Pete are setting…

The Body Next Door

I flew through The Body Next Door, completing it two days. I started it on…

Sandwich

I wanted to read Catherine Newman's new novel Sandwich as soon as I heard about…

The Midnight Feast, by Lucy Foley

The Midnight Feast, the newest thriller from Lucy Foley, takes place at the opening weekend…