This site is new and actively being built — the work of a solo indie developer. Some data is still being populated and improved. Learn more →

The Debt to Pleasure

Get this book

Amazon

Amazon

Books & Kindle

Audible

Audible

Audiobook

Bookshop.org

Bookshop.org

Support indie stores

Affiliate links — I earn a small commission if you buy, at no extra cost to you. Learn more

Data via openlibrary

book 1996

The Debt to Pleasure

No ratings yet

An Englishman of indeterminate age whose spiritual home has always been France, Tarquin embarks on a journey of the senses, regaling us with his wickedly funny, poisonously opinionated meditations on everything from the erotics of dislike to the psychology of a menu, from the perverse history of the peach to the brutalization of the British palate, from cheese as "the corpse of milk" to the binding action of blood. As Tarquin peels away the layers of his past, he proves himself a master of sly wit and subversive ideas. Only gradually, insidiously, do the outlines of a distinctly quirky aesthetic and a highly eccentric moral philosophy emerge, until the truth becomes unavoidable: This is not the voluptuary's memoir it purports to be, and Tarquin Winot is a master of something more than wit and opinion, something infinitely, quiveringly, sinister.

More like this

Report incorrect info