海角大神

In the Kitchen

Murder and mayhem haunt an executive chef in the restaurant of a London hotel that has seen better days.

In the Kitchen By Monica Ali Scribner 436 pp., $26.99

Restaurants are one of my favorite indulgences. (Cooking is fun. Dishes, less so. And my son is not quite tall enough to inflict with that chore.) As a result, I have stayed far, far away from Anthony Bourdain鈥檚 鈥淜itchen Confidential鈥 and any reality series starring Gordon Ramsay.

But so pervasive has become the cult of the celebrity chef that even a punter can easily identify the various jobs in that scorching, knife-filled danger zone that is the commercial kitchen. Thanks to 鈥Ratatouille鈥 (and seriously, thank you, Pixar), so can your average 6-year-old. Monica Ali鈥檚 new novel, In the Kitchen, focuses on the midlife crisis of an executive chef named Gabe Lightfoot. Unfortunately, Gabe turns out to be a whole lot less appealing hero than a rat.

Ali, whose wonderfully memorable debut novel 鈥淏rick Lane鈥 was a finalist for the Booker Prize, is an expert at detailing the immigrant experience in London. Gabe鈥檚 kitchen at the Imperial (a hotel whose glory days are well behind it, as the plastic flowers on the tables attest) is filled with a 鈥United Nations task force鈥 of Russians, North Africans, and Indians 鈥 any one of whose story turns out to be more interesting than that of their boss. And therein lies both the appeal and the problem inherent in 鈥淚n the Kitchen.鈥

Ali is a detail-oriented writer who brings her creative scrutiny to bear on everything from the textile industry in Britain in the 1970s to the vents the grill chef de partie slices in his uniform to the heartbreaking procedure by which Liberian children were turned into soldiers. Whenever 鈥淚n the Kitchen鈥 stays focused on its title, it sizzles. 鈥淲hen the kitchen was busy, when knives wheeled and pans slammed, when the burners hissed and flared, when the white plates marched, when the chefs shouted orders and insults and jokes, swerving and bending, performing the modern dance of cuisine, this place was transformed.... What a place, thought Gabe, looking away at the grilled and bolted back door and barred and lightless windows. What a place: part prison, part lunatic asylum, part community hall.鈥 Ali possesses great powers of lyricism and insight, neither of which have deserted her since her first book.

But Gabe鈥檚 romantic problems are, sadly, boring (even to his new lover). And, since readers know about his looming breakdown from Page 1, it takes entirely too long to hit.

The catalyst for Gabe鈥檚 meltdown is the suspicious death of Yuri, a Russian night porter, in the basement of the Imperial Hotel, where the porter had (unbeknownst to Gabe) been living. Months away from opening his own restaurant, Gabe instead finds himself haunted nightly by Yuri and unwilling to accept the official verdict of accidental death.

But he鈥檚 not focused enough to turn himself into a toque-crowned Sherlock Holmes, so he mostly just worries vaguely about it and a host of other problems, including his dad鈥檚 terminal diagnosis of cancer and the young woman he found searching Yuri鈥檚 room. Lena is a former sex slave on the run from her abusive pimp, and Gabe takes her in, he thinks, out of the goodness of his heart.

However, he also takes her up on her coldly delivered offer of sex, despite Charlie, the jazz singer he plans to marry, someday. (Charlie, full of self-deprecating humor and charisma, gets rather short shrift as a character.) The restaurant manager may also be running a human trafficking ring out of the Imperial, but again, Gabe can鈥檛 quite seem to concentrate enough to find out for sure.

Ali has set up enough drama to fuel a Dickens novel, but instead the book is deeply internalized from Gabe鈥檚 point of view. While dreaming of cooking French cuisine 鈥渨ith rigor,鈥 he lies to Lena, to Charlie, to his boss, and to himself, and slackly debates the nature of Britishness and the possibility of free will with everyone from his dad to the British minister of Parliament who is putting up part of the money for Gabe鈥檚 restaurant.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 interesting, Gabriel, is the way in which the idea of Britishness is or has become essentially about a neutral, value-free identity,鈥 the MP opines glibly. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a nonidentity, if you like. A vacuum.鈥

Gabe鈥檚 dad would agree with that analysis, and it saddens him deeply. Ted, a Yorkshire millworker who believes being British used to mean something, sounds downright prophetic about the current recession, worrying over a nation of tradesmen being turned into a nation of consumers. 鈥 鈥楾here鈥檚 no industry anymore,鈥 said Ted. 鈥榃e don鈥檛 produce anything. You can鈥檛 build a pyramid upside down, it鈥檒l fall over, you鈥檝e to get the foundation right.鈥 鈥

Gabe鈥檚 foundations clearly are crumbling, and the climax finds him running through the streets of London and ending up in an onion field. 鈥淕abriel stood on the bridge and looked down at the slick black water. The bloated city fizzed all around. He opened his mouth and let out a low moan. He looked up at the sky that seemed to hold not stars but the weak reflected lights of the never-ending earth.... He would pray for himself if he knew how.鈥

The novel contains many such powerful passages, interspersed with the occasional dead spot. 鈥淚n the Kitchen鈥 has its flaws, but those are intertwined with Ali鈥檚 terrific writing. It鈥檚 like an overly ambitious special whose flavors don鈥檛 quite jell. You鈥檇 come back to the restaurant, but next time, you鈥檇 order something else. And it still beats fast food any day

Yvonne Zipp regularly reviews fiction for the Monitor.

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