Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - Trail of Crumbs: Hunger, Love, and the Search for Home

Trail of Crumbs: Hunger, Love, and the Search for Home
Trail of Crumbs Hunger Love and the Search for Home
Author: Kim Sunee
When Kim Sunee was three years old, her mother took her to a marketplace, deposited her on a bench with a fistful of food, and promised she'd be right back. Three days later a policeman took the little girl, clutching what was now only a fistful of crumbs, to a police station and told her that she'd been abandoned by her mother. — Fast-fo...  more »
Info icon
ISBN-13: 9780446697903
ISBN-10: 0446697907
Publication Date: 1/6/2009
Pages: 400
Rating:
  • Currently 3.1/5 Stars.
 17

3.1 stars, based on 17 ratings
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

whippoorwill avatar reviewed Trail of Crumbs: Hunger, Love, and the Search for Home on
Helpful Score: 2
Lately, I've been inexplicably drawn to foodie books in all their incarnations. It makes little sense to me, really. I don't cook. I'm a picky eater. I hate grocery shopping. Nevertheless, I've picked up quite a few of the books in the past months. Some I've loved . Some, however, I've been slightly ambivalent towards. Unfortunately, Trail of Crumbs by Kim Sunee falls into the latter category.

Trail of Crumbs is a chronicle of Kim Sunee's twenties living abroad, focusing primarily on her stay in Provence and Paris as the girlfriend of a rich French businessman. Much of the memoir revolves around food and the concept of home and how the two are almost always linked---from her grandfather's gumbo in her childhood New Orleans, to the fresh air markets of France near her home with her lover, to the street vendor food in the Korea in which she was born and abandoned.

All the ingredients for a great memoir are here- tragedy, romance, drama, the hope for redemption. Unfortunately, I found Sunee slightly unsympathetic which made reading and caring about her life quite difficult. I am sure this says more about me than I'd care to admit, but, it was near impossible for me to muster much sympathy for a 22 year old woman living in the lap of luxury in a charming French village with her incredibly wealthy lover. At times, I struggled to find the motivation to finish the book.

But, finish it I did, a fact I owe almost entirely to the quality of Sunee's writing. The food parts are descriptive and highly readable. The writing is fluid without being flowery, and kept me reading long after my initial interest had waned.
reviewed Trail of Crumbs: Hunger, Love, and the Search for Home on
Helpful Score: 1
I felt this was well written, the food parts were really captivating, but, like others reviewers, I felt no sympathy for the young woman. She seems to have little to no regard for her adoptive family, little appreciation for the fact that she was basically able to live in France without actually working, using other people's money and adoration of her. she pretty much left me cold
Read All 6 Book Reviews of "Trail of Crumbs Hunger Love and the Search for Home"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

reviewed Trail of Crumbs: Hunger, Love, and the Search for Home on + 72 more book reviews
I liked the book very much but I do agree with some of the other comments. I didn't see any conclusion and felt the last part of the book was too rushed and left out information that made understanding her situation murky. I don't agree that she was less sympathetic because she was living a charmed existence through her wealthy lover. The whole thrust of the book was about her early childhood abandonment and the lack of self-awareness that resulted. I would love for her to do a follow-up book to flesh out the rest of her story and address how the search for her birth family has gone.
reviewed Trail of Crumbs: Hunger, Love, and the Search for Home on + 46 more book reviews
Wandering tale of an adopted Korean girl, now a young woman......long story of her confusion over how to grow into herself....but this is a long book that meanders and ends rather abrubtly. Glad I read it but not a favorite.


Genres: