Wine Snob. The very phrase seems redundant, doesn’t it? When faced with this snobbiest of snobberies, the civilian wine enthusiast needs the help of savvy translators like David Kamp and David Lynch. Their Wine Snob’s Dictionary delivers witty explication of both old-school oeno-obsessions (What’s claret? Who’s Michael Broadbent?) and such new-wave terms as “malolactic fermentation” and “fruit bomb.” Among the other things Kamp and Lynch demystify:
Finish: the Snob code-term for “aftertaste.” (Robert Parker includes the stopwatch-measured length of a wine’s finish in his ratings.)
Meritage: an American wine classification that rhymes with “heritage,” and should NEVER be pronounced “meri-TAHJ.”
Terroir: that elusive quality of vineyard soil that has sommeliers talking of “gunflint,” “leather,” and “candied fruits”
Featuring ripe, luscious, full-bodied illustrations by Snob’s Dictionary stalwart Ross MacDonald, The Wine Snob’s Dictionary is as heady and sparkling as a vintage Taittinger, only much less expensive… and much more giggle-inducing. Cheers!
Author
David Kamp
DAVID KAMP has been a writer and editor for Vanity Fair and GQ for more than a decade. He lives in New York.
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David Lynch
David Lynch advanced to the front ranks of international cinema in 1977 with the release of his first film, the startlingly original Eraserhead. Since then, Lynch has been nominated for two best director Academy Awards for The Elephant Man and Blue Velvet, was awarded the Palme d’Or for Wild at Heart, swept the country with Twin Peaks mania in 1990 when his groundbreaking television series premiered on ABC, and has established himself as an artist of tremendous range and wit. He is the author of a previous book on Transcendental Meditation, Catching the Big Fish.
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