- Published: 1 September 2015
- ISBN: 9780857986870
- Imprint: Random House Australia
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 368
Eat First, Talk Later
- Published: 1 September 2015
- ISBN: 9780857986870
- Imprint: Random House Australia
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 368
A wonderful book about diaspora ... It's a sophisticated book, and an important book right now ... It's also a lot of fun: her parents are great characters ... hers is a terrific story
Laura Kroetsch, Director of Adelaide Writers' Week
[Yahp] grazes on subjects as diverse as the many types of tofu available in Asia, Australia’s policy towards refugees and asylum seekers, and ... the musical South Pacific. The result is a complex feast of many dishes, pungent, unfamiliar yet satisfying to both the palate and the mind.
Caroline Baum, Booktopia
This sprawling memoir is a bit of a buffet - a huge array beautifully dished up ... The best course is when she dishes up some home truths about our northern neighbour, on corruption and the public peace that is achieved through repression of individuals and information.
Adelaide Advertiser
This well-researched memoir is told in a back-and-forth narrative that incorporates important aspects of Malay life: place, food, eating, storytelling, songs, love, religion and tradition. Each section is twisted and plaited through social and political references, corruption, race riots, social distinctions, racial policies and historical narratives.
Good Reading
Beth Yahp's beautifully crafted memoir of her ancestors, her parents, and herself ... ranges widely across the region's long and troubled history and politics, its gloriously multifaceted culture, each segment vivid and packed with information ... Travellers through the Malay Peninsula will welcome this portrait of a country which is so much more than an exotic hub, where the tourists usually skim over the surface, rave about the food, complain about the traffic, and depart. Those aspiring memoir-writers fortunate enough to be in Yahp's writing classes will find solace and much to emulate.
Hilary McPhee, Australian Book Review