“The celebrity chef’s raw and darkly humorous memoir explores her family’s demise and reconstruction—through divorce, estrangements, a brother’s sudden death and another’s suicide.”—People
“James Beard Award winner [Gabrielle Hamilton] focuses on her own incredible, complicated clan, examining what made her so thrilled as a child to be part of this singular clan and what, later in life, wrenched them all apart.”—Town & Country
“Hamilton’s voice is as singular and rollicking as ever in Next of Kin, but it feels rare and special to have it applied to the kind of complicated family history that so many of us only come to confront in adulthood (if at all).”—Vogue
“What Next of Kin is really about, much more than Blood, Bones & Butter, is the debt we owe to family and the claim they make on us. [It] demands an awed respect. It’s a naked, deboning sort of family accounting.”—GrubStreet
“You won’t be able to put down Gabrielle Hamilton’s story of the excitement, resilience, agony, and defiance required to be a member of her family. She doesn’t mess around. In her singular, lyrical style, Hamilton has given us nothing less than an exploration of death, love, and the meaning of life.”—Ariel Levy, New York Times bestselling author of The Rules Do Not Apply
“Gabrielle Hamilton has crafted a shimmering and achingly beautiful exploration of family—those bonds that forge us, the secrets that define us, and the what-ifs that haunt us long after we think we’ve moved on. This is a book that will burrow deep into your heart and stay there, the way family does.”—Michael Hainey, New York Times bestselling author of After Visiting Friends
“Gabrielle Hamilton’s Next of Kin is piercing, horrifying, and perversely gorgeous, to name a few of its more prominent attributes. It charts, with almost murderous precision, the myriad ways in which family and fate collide. One rarely gets to use the word “profound,” under any circumstances. In its acumen, in its fullness of emotion, in the stunning ferocity of its prose, Next of Kin is profound.”—Michael Cunningham, New York Times bestselling author of The Hours and Day
“Starts with a sandwich and works its way through the small-print menu of the heart. A story to fill you up and with plenty to take home . . . I loved it.”—Jeanette Winterson, New York Times bestselling author of Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?
“Hamilton is hardly the first writer to find deep sorrow beneath her family’s glittering facade, but the vivid detail of her scenes and her rigorous pursuit of the truth feel revelatory. Layered, moving, and funny, this is a must-read.”—Publishers Weekly, starred review