Book: The Wine Bible (Paperback)
Posted on September 27th, 2007 | by security |Amazon.com’s Best of 2001
Though it drinks deep of its subject, Karen MacNeil’s Wine Bible deftly avoids two traps many wine books fall into: talking down to wine novices or talking up to more experienced enophiles. The book avoids these traps through MacNeil’s obvious, and infectious, love of her subject, which comes out in almost every sentence of the book, and which lets her talk about wine in a way that combines the good teacher, the trusted friend, and the expert sommelier. As director of the wine program at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa Valley, California, MacNeil is one of the world’s true experts on wine. After reading a chapter on the Burgenland, for example, you’ve learned about the region’s sweet wines while feeling like you’re actually there, toasting a glass of Cuvee Suss with the author. It is this passion that leads to describing an Italian riservas as “mesmerizing” and a Cabernet Sauvignon as having “texture like cashmere.”
The Wine Bible is broken into countries, hitting all of the major wine producers and most of the minor ones. Each section gives detailed descriptions of the country’s wines (with chapters on individual regions when necessary), highlighting specific wine producers and individual wines, as well as talking about local foods, customs, and other tidbits that add to the reading experience. MacNeil begins her journey through the world’s wine with an invaluable section on “Mastering Wine,” which lets a reader get ready before uncorking separate sections. –A.J. Rathbun
Review
“A dazzling, comprehensive, modern guide to wine, free of elitism and pedantry. This thoroughly successful work sets a new standard and makes wine more accessible and user-friendly than it has ever been before.”
—Anthony Dias Blue, wine and spirits editor, Bon Appétit
Book Description
THE MOST COMPLETE WINE BOOK EVER. A must for anyone who loves wine, whether they are a pro or an amateur. Thorough, authoritative, and entertaining. (Robert Mondavi, founder and chairman emeritus of the Robert Mondavi Family of Wines”
“The most informative and entertaining book I’ve ever seen on the subject.” (Danny Meyer, co-author of The Union Square CafT Cookbook)
The essentials: The romance and intrigue of Burgundy of sauvignon blanc and the surprising elegance of Spain’s top Riojas. Italy, one of wine’s most enchanting and ancient homelands. What makes a great wine great? The reason behind Champagne’s bubbles. The precise and food-friendly wines of Germany. California, wine’s Camelot. The lip-smackingly good wines of Australia. The complexities of Port revealed. How a vineyard profoundly affects a wine’s character.
Plus, matching wine with food - and mood. The secrets of professional wine tasters and how to expand your wine-tasting vocabulary. And everything else you need to know to buy, store, serve, and enjoy the world’s most captivating beverage.
The shimmering elegance of Veuve Clicquot, affordable luxury in a glass, page 185.
Ravishing, elegant, and rich, Petrus in Ingrid Bergman in red satin, page 156.
Some wines are like people… they get better as they get older, pg. 64.
Sherry, the world’s most misunderstood and underappreciated wine, page 437.
From the Inside Flap
Think of this book as a lively course from an expert teacher, grounded deeply in the fundamentals and enriched with passionate asides, tips, anecdotes, definitions, glossaries, illustrations, maps, wine labels - everything, in fact, but the actual wine itself. By America’s renowned wine teacher and authority.
“A dazzling, comprehensive, modern guide to wine, free of elitism and pedantry. This thoroughly successful work sets a new standard and makes wine more accessible and user-friendly than it has ever been before.” (Anthony Dias Blue, wine and spirits editor, Bon Appetit)
From the Back Cover
THE MOST COMPLETE WINE BOOK EVER. A must for anyone who loves wine, whether they are a pro or an amateur. Thorough, authoritative, and entertaining. (Robert Mondavi, founder and chairman emeritus of the Robert Mondavi Family of Wines”
“The most informative and entertaining book I’ve ever seen on the subject.” (Danny Meyer, co-author of The Union Square CafT Cookbook)
The essentials: The romance and intrigue of Burgundy of sauvignon blanc and the surprising elegance of Spain’s top Riojas. Italy, one of wine’s most enchanting and ancient homelands. What makes a great wine great? The reason behind Champagne’s bubbles. The precise and food-friendly wines of Germany. California, wine’s Camelot. The lip-smackingly good wines of Australia. The complexities of Port revealed. How a vineyard profoundly affects a wine’s character.
Plus, matching wine with food - and mood. The secrets of professional wine tasters and how to expand your wine-tasting vocabulary. And everything else you need to know to buy, store, serve, and enjoy the world’s most captivating beverage.
The shimmering elegance of Veuve Clicquot, affordable luxury in a glass, page 185.
Ravishing, elegant, and rich, Petrus in Ingrid Bergman in red satin, page 156.
Some wines are like people… they get better as they get older, pg. 64.
Sherry, the world’s most misunderstood and underappreciated wine, page 437.
About the Author
Karen MacNeil was named chairperson of the Center for Professional Wine Studies at the Culinary Institute of America (CIA) at Greystone in the Napa Valley this past January. MacNeil has a long list of credentials as a writer and wine and food educator. She has been published in more than 50 magazines and newspapers. Her most recent book, The Wine Bible, a 900-plus page work, won the 2001 Best Wine Book, an award given each year by Georges DuBoeuf. It is easily the best-selling wine book in the United States, with a reported sale of 180,000 copies to date. The average wine book sells about 6,000 copies.
Product Details
* Paperback: 904 pages
* Publisher: Workman Publishing Company (September 2001)
* Language: English
* Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6 x 2 inches
* Shipping Weight: 2.6 pounds.
* Average Customer Review: based on 69 reviews.Very Good.
* Amazon.com Sales Rank: #2,467 in Books
People found the following review helpful:
Your second wine book, June 28, 2003
By Eric J. Lyman (Roma, Lazio Italy)
The spine on my worn copy of the Wine Bible is cracked and its pages are dog-eared, even though I think the book has several notable shortcomings. As I write this, I find myself in the unusual position of criticizing the thick volume even though I turn to it for information on a regular basis.
My biggest complaint is that I feel the book doesn’t really know what it wants to be. On the one hand, it is a comprehensive reference book that in many areas goes into more depth than other general wine books. But it falls short as a reference book because it lacks the scope of books like The World Atlas of Wine or The Global Encyclopedia of Wine, which cover more up-and-coming wine producing countries, more specific producers and, especially in the case of The World Atlas of Wine, are enhanced by beautiful photographs and maps. Though the Wine Bible is substantial (it weighs in at a hefty 910 pages) its design is more compact than the other books I mentioned, and so might make a better travel companion for someone visiting multiple wine producing regions in a single trip. But the lack of good maps makes a supplemental book necessary.
Additionally, the book can feel like a disjointed collection of articles that ought to have been better integrated before publication. Often, the same information (referring to multiple or confusing names for grape varieties or regions, or quality standards in specific countries) is referred to parenthetically several times, often in quick succession — something unnecessary, especially given the book’s excellent glossary.
But despite these criticisms, I find myself referring to the book repeatedly. Part of the reason for that is author Karen MacNeil’s pleasing and unpretentious writing style, which somehow manages to please wine lovers of many different levels of knowledge. Ms. MacNeil’s passion for wine comes through in the text and her knowledge of the subject is extremely impressive, with her descriptions often compensating for a lack of quality photos. And though I would like to see more wine producing areas covered by the book, the regions she does address are covered extremely comprehensively. The quality of information is also very even: before travels to these areas I have read the book’s sections on South Africa, the Mosel, Loire, Ribera del Duero, Languedoc, as well as everything on my adopted home country, and could not detect any ebb in Ms. Mac Neil’s enthusiasm or knowledge.
After some thought, I settled on four stars for this review, despite the complaints I have. The book is just too useful and too skillfully written for fewer stars. The next addition, I feel sure, will earn five on my improvised scale.
Once you have moved beyond the most basic level in wine knowledge, this is an important book to have. If you can buy only one book on the subject, this is not the one I would suggest — The World Atlas of Wine gets my vote for that honor — but if you were to limit your collection to two books, then I think this is a serious candidate for that second position. Once you’ve got that much covered, I’d lean toward a book that focuses on your favorite wine producing region or another specific aspect of the subject, like tasting or wine production.




One Response to “Book: The Wine Bible (Paperback)”
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