My Dining Hell: Twenty Ways To Have a Lousy Night Out

· Penguin UK
4.3
15 reviews
eBook
50
Pages
Eligible

About this eBook

I have been a restaurant critic for over a decade, written reviews of well over 700 establishments, and if there is one thing I have learnt it is that people like reviews of bad restaurants. No, scratch that. They adore them, feast upon them like starving vultures who have spotted fly-blown carrion out in the bush.

They claim otherwise, of course. Readers like to present themselves as private arbiters of taste; as people interested in the good stuff. I'm sure they are. I'm sure they really do care whether the steak was served au point as requested or whether the soufflé had achieved a certain ineffable lightness. And yet, when I compare dinner to bodily fluids, the room to an S & M chamber in Neasden (only without the glamour or class), and the bill to an act of grand larceny, why, then the baying crowd is truly happy.

Don't believe me? Then why, presented with the chance to buy this ebook filled with accounts of twenty restaurants - their chefs, their owners, their poor benighted front of house staff - getting a complete stiffing courtesy of the sort of vitriolic bloody-curdling review which would make the victims call for their mummies, did you seize it with both hands?

Ratings and reviews

4.3
15 reviews
A Google user
17 June 2012
Just the list of chapters and a short foreword. Can't read a sample, so not buying it which is a shame because it really sounded like my kind of book. Don't tell me I've finished reading my sample when you dont even provide one!
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Robin Hoyle
20 April 2013
Read on the train as advised by penguin shorts only to attract grumpy stares as I (almost) surpressed guffaws & on occasions almost spat coffee at the unamused business man opposite. Rayner's ire is a guilty joy.
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A Google user
26 June 2012
Ok little read. Rayners style of writing is moderately funny.
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About the author

Jay Rayner is an award-winning writer, journalist and broadcaster with a fine collection of floral shirts. He has written on everything from crime and politics, through cinema and theatre to the visual arts, but is best known as restaurant critic for the Observer. For a while he was a sex columnist for Cosmopolitan; he also once got himself completely waxed in the name of journalism. He only mentions this because it hurt. Jay is a former Young Journalist of the Year, Critic of the Year and Restaurant Critic of the Year, though not all in the same year. Somehow he has also found time to write four novels and two works of non-fiction. He is a regular on British television, where he is familiar as a judge on Masterchef and the resident food expert on The One Show. He likes pig.

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