Publisher's Weekly Review
Boston-area food blogger Murray writes about a year working on a Cape Cod oyster farm-a demanding work cycle, with backbreaking duties. Often under spirit-crushing conditions, she was rapidly schooled in the tasks and tools of her crew position, quickly adjusting and becoming skilled at the work. Murray's own love of food and food writing informs the narrative, and she skillfully dramatizes the scenes of summertime sowing and depicts her many colorful co-workers. She eventually moves into the company offices as the farm expands its sustainable, beneficial practices in the restaurant industry and wider global village. She even does a day's work in the kitchens of Thomas Keller's Per Se and later reaps the immediate culinary benefits of the very oysters that she and her colleagues had laboriously harvested. Murray eschews poetic waxing on her subject and focuses closely on the action and the hard, hard work of farming, closing each chapter with a broad range of oyster recipes. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
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Booklist Review
Writer Murray gives up her lucrative, urbane job as a magazine writer and food critic for a chance to get her hands dirty and her feet soaked at one of New England's most notable oyster farms. Despite the challenges of moving from a desk job to the physical demands of outdoor exertions on boats in frigid waters, she comes to love the daily duties of sorting oysters, tending to their nurseries, crating them for shipment, and generally learning a business from the bottom up. She finds plenty of reward actually helping produce food. What she doesn't count on is the toll it takes on her marriage when her demanding schedule keeps her apart from her husband for days. Readers learn a lot about raising oysters from tiny seed babies to the jumbo adults so prized by the nation's leading restaurants. Murray concludes chapters with recipes that will intrigue devotees of oysters' many culinary uses.--Knoblauch, Mark Copyright 2010 Booklist
Library Journal Review
A journalist by trade, Murray makes the surprising decision to enter the unfamiliar territory of an oyster farm in Duxbury, MA. Island Creek encompasses 50 acres of seawater and "grows" oysters from seeds to maturity. Part of what Murray hopes to discover is a sense of place, or merroir, in oyster parlance. You don't have to like oysters to appreciate her underlying message: slow down and enjoy life. There's much to notice, much to experience. Part of the book's charm is following Murray through the process of becoming aware of her surroundings in working directly with an edible product. Readers who enjoy Linda Greenlaw's writing (e.g., The Lobster Chronicles: Life on a Very Small Island) will appreciate Murray's offering of just enough information to allow them to become knowledgeable in all things oyster without overdoing it. Oyster recipes follow each chapter. VERDICT Though the book contains a lot of detail on the mechanics and process of farming oysters, Murray's portrayal of her personal response to life's changes and challenges will hold readers' interest. An entertaining and informative firsthand experience of the locavore movement.-Elizabeth Rogers, CEF Lib. Syst., Plattsburgh, NY (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.