Point About Books Bread Alone (Bread Alone #1)

Title:Bread Alone (Bread Alone #1)
Author:Judi Hendricks
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 368 pages
Published:May 28th 2002 by William Morrow Paperbacks (first published June 1st 2001)
Categories:Fiction. Womens Fiction. Chick Lit. Food and Drink. Food. Romance. Contemporary
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Bread Alone (Bread Alone #1) Paperback | Pages: 368 pages
Rating: 3.75 | 5506 Users | 577 Reviews

Narration In Pursuance Of Books Bread Alone (Bread Alone #1)

Thirty-one-year-old Wynter Morrison is lost when her husband leaves her for another woman. Desperate for a change, she moves to Seattle, where she spends aimless hours at a local bakery sipping coffee and inhaling the sweet aromas of freshly-made bread. These visits bring back memories of the time she aprenticed at a French boulangerie, when her passion for bread-making nearly led her to leave college and become a baker.

Once again, the desire to bake bread consumes her thoughts. When offered a position at the bake shop, Wyn quickly accepts, hoping that the baking will help her move on. But soon Wyn discovers that the making of bread—the kneading of the dough—possesses an unexpected and wondrous healing power—one that will ultimately renew her heart and her soul.


Define Books Concering Bread Alone (Bread Alone #1)

Original Title: Bread Alone
ISBN: 0060084405 (ISBN13: 9780060084400)
Edition Language: English
Series: Bread Alone #1
Characters: Wynter Morrison
Setting: Seattle, Washington(United States)

Rating About Books Bread Alone (Bread Alone #1)
Ratings: 3.75 From 5506 Users | 577 Reviews

Write-Up About Books Bread Alone (Bread Alone #1)
I finished Bread Alone and thought: "Wow, I loved this book. Why did I love this book?" It is one of those things I really should not have enjoyed as I did. There were no huge dramas, conspiracies, or epic adventures. In fact, most of it was simple conversations or private thoughts of the heroine, just everyday life. There are many bread recipes for crying out loud. And I loved every second of it. My friend Mel gave it to me to read after I got my heart thoroughly broken. Shattered, actually.

I read this while writing a story with a female main character. Bread Alone was presented to me as a good example of developing a central female POV character, as done by a female author. It showed me what I shouldn't do with my heroine.Wynter is a 32-year-old Hancock Park trophy wife who gets dumped by the cheating rich spouse, weathers a series of mostly self-inflicted misfortunes, then finds fulfillment making bread in Seattle and bedding a tall-dark-and-handsome bartender. Other than the

This was a good book. Like some reviewers have said, I liked it more than I would think but the end could have been as detailed as the plot moves the heroine did/begun. Quite the view on how to go through a divorce, how tiring it can be and how depressing... but life goes on.I'd say this is 65% woman's fiction, 35% romance.

Every now and then you come across a book that feels like it was written just for you, for this moment in your life. This is one of those books. It was like Ms. Hendricks lovingly wrote me a novel, years ago, where it waited all this time until I finally pulled a used copy from a dusty shelf in a second-hand store to be read when I would most strongly identify with her story. And I did.This novel was a Seattle foodie love letter and I ate it all up in one sitting because it had all the things I

Such a gem of a book! I truly loved it. The characters were well rounded, the setting described to perfection.... I couldnt put it down. I just love these slice of life books. I could completely relate to what Wynter was going through and I loved discovering who she was right along with her.

I really enjoy what I call foodie fiction. And this one was a nice engaging read featuring home made bread. Endings and the bumpy path to new beginnings came complete with some recipes for the bread featured in the book.And of course there were plenty of the inevitable analogies of bread to life. I liked it well enough to continue the story with book number two, The Baker's Apprentice.

Okay, the ending is predictable. Every novel I have read about how a woman copes when her marriage ends has ended in the same way, so no surprises there. But other than that this is a very good book, very readable, and almost pornographic in it's descriptions of bread. Oh how I wanted to eat some of the bread that she was creating!I particularly like the turns of phrase in the book. I'd quote an example, but I have left the book upstairs. The experience of the woman in this book is fairly true

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