Metacritic Books

The Perfectionist
by Rudolph Chelminski

ISBN: 1592401074
Gotham, 368 pages, $27.50
Nonfiction Biographies & Memoirs, Cooking, Food & Diets
Released 05/19/2005

This biography examines the life and career of famed three-star French chef Bernard Loiseau, who took his own life in 2003.

Overall Metascore

This is an average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

75 / 100

Critic Reviews

Outstanding Kirkus Reviews
Intensely involving: a character study of a gifted, driven man and the world that created him. [15 Mar 2005, p.327]
Outstanding Publishers Weekly
A fascinating, discursive story. [28 Mar 2005, p.65]
Favorable San Francisco Chronicle Masha Gutkin
Chelminski's prose is occasionally overwrought as he hagiographically depicts Loiseau's life... Chelminski's whimsical culinary clarifications and anecdotes, garnered from a lifetime of immersion in the world of cuisine, offset these unwieldy bits.
Favorable Library Journal John Charles
Readers who reveled in the details offered by Leslie Brenner's American Appetite: The Coming of Age of a Cuisine or who loved Jacques Pepin's The Apprentice: My Life in the Kitchen will find Chelminski's expertly crafted story equally tempting. [15 Apr 2005, p.112]
Favorable Entertainment Weekly Allyssa Lee
While it lacks the quick-paced dish of Kitchen Confidential, Perfectionist effectively reveals the pressure-cooker atmosphere among a culinary elite dominated by intense rivalries, fickle reviewers, and hypercritical chefs.
Favorable New York Observer Bryan Miller
Omissions aside, Rudolph Chelminski has written an exceptionally insightful and readable book about the mad, unforgiving and relentless world of haute cuisine. [30 May 2005]
Favorable The Independent Christopher Hirst
Though his prose is occasionally a little overheated, no book will tell you more about the effort involved in producing the best food in the world.
Favorable The New York Times William Grimes
''The Perfectionist'' tells, in rich detail, the story of Loiseau's rapid rise and desperate efforts to stay on top, but this cautionary tale is also a deeply informed guide to the last half century of French cuisine.
Favorable USA Today Jerry Shriver
His examination of the haute cuisine milieu is balanced, though wordy.
Favorable Washington Post Jonathan Yardley
There are times when Chelminski's prose descends into the mannered and cute, especially when he lapses into the food snobbery he so roundly decries, but The Perfectionist is a good book: knowledgeable, revealing and informative.
Favorable The Onion A.V. Club Scott Tobias
Though Chelminski's prose could also stand to cut back on the heavy sauce, he thoroughly understands the traditions and pressure of haute cuisine, and his personal encounters with Loiseau help draw out an utterly credible psychological profile.
Mixed The New York Times Book Review Jay Jennings
Egregiously overwritten but deeply well informed and ultimately irresistible.
Mixed Boston Globe Lylah M. Alphonse
Unfortunately, the frequent tangents and meandering descriptions make the story choppy and confusing at times, and the book sometimes takes on a fawning tone that makes it seem as if the writer expected Loiseau himself to be reading it.

CLOSE THIS WINDOW

©2008 CNET Networks Inc. All rights reserved.