Kate & Frida A novel of friendship, food, and books

Kim Fay

Book - 2025

"A buoyant, mouth-watering oasis of a novel, Kate & Frida is a love letter to bookshops and booksellers, to the way stories shape how we perceive ourselves, to the passion we bring to life in our twenties, and to the last precious years before the internet changed everything. Twenty-something Frida Rodriguez comes to Paris in 1991, relishing the city's butter-soaked cuisine and seeking her future as a war correspondent. But when she writes to a bookshop in Seattle, she receives more than just the book she requests. A friendship begins that will redefine the person she thought she wanted to become. Seattle bookseller Kate Fair is transformed by Frida's free spirit, spurred to kiss her handsome coworker, to believe in herse...lf as a writer, and to find beauty even in loss. Through the most tumultuous years of their young lives--personally and globally--Kate and Frida's friendship sustains and nourishes them as they show each other how to overcome self-doubt and the necessity of embracing joy even through our darkest hours"--

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FICTION/Fay Kim
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Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Fay Kim (NEW SHELF) Due Apr 4, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Novels
Published
New York : G. P. Putnam's Sons [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Kim Fay (author)
Physical Description
275 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780593852385
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Fay (Love & Saffron, 2022) delivers another winning epistolary novel about transformative friendship, this time featuring two American twentysomethings seeking meaningful experiences in the pre-internet 1990s. After Frida Rodriguez mails a letter from her Paris hotel to order Martha Gellhorn's The Face of War from a Seattle bookshop, store employee Kate Fair responds. Frida, exuberant and ambitious, hopes to become a "War Journo Dame" like Gellhorn herself; the lively, sensitive Kate wants to see her novel published but needs guidance. Their correspondence, vividly shaped by their personalities, zips across the Atlantic, full of family stories, book talk, and personal updates. Fay does an outstanding job of showing how both are changed by significant events, like Frida's visit to war-torn Sarajevo and Kate's unexpected romance, while remaining buoyed by their supportive bond. Their observations about writing are thought-provoking and sometimes very funny. Delicious multicultural recipes are highlighted, and readers who lived through the '90s will nod at the cultural touchstones. Fiction lovers will embrace Fay's immensely wise and enjoyable novel.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A book order sent by letter from Paris to Seattle turns into a flourishing friendship. It's charming to encounter an epistolary novel these days. The once-popular form has fallen out of fashion in the age of digital communication, but Fay resuscitates it, setting her story in the early 1990s, the last possible time when it could be convincing. The letter writers are two young women, Kate Fair and Frida Rodriguez, who even meet through the mail. Kate works at Seattle's Puget Sound Book Company and is given the task of answering a chatty letter Frida sends to the store ordering a copy ofThe Face of War, published in 1959 by journalist Martha Gellhorn. "I was told I'm the only person here who's perky enough to respond to you," she writes. Frida wants the book because, although she was raised in Los Angeles, she's living in Paris with big dreams of becoming what she calls a War Journo Dame. Kate, too, wants to be a writer and has finished several novels without publishing any. Their correspondence quickly becomes a friendship, their letters full of their personal histories, current dreams, and romantic relationships. Kate falls for a depressive young novelist, while Frida follows a dashing war correspondent to Sarajevo under siege--and suddenly her letters become heartbreakingly serious, no longer lively reports on Paris cafes but stark descriptions of the horror of war. She returns to Paris, unsure whether she has the courage to be a War Journo Dame, but finds a new passion working with refugees. Back in Seattle, Kate deals with her own losses and discoveries. Their voices remain distinct in the letters, often naïve, self-doubting, or overconfident, but authentically the voices of young women finding themselves. The book spans several years with lots of fun '90s pop-culture details, and it often focuses on food, from peanut butter cookies to chiles rellenos, with several recipes included at the end. An old-fashioned form and two lively modern women make for an enjoyable novel. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.